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10[[quoteright:343:[[ComicBook/TheSandman1989 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gaimansandman.jpg]]]]
11[[caption-width-right:343:An [[Myth/EgyptianMythology Egyptian cat goddess]], a FallenAngel, TheFairFolk, a reanimated scarecrow [[PumpkinPerson with a pumpkin head]], two living [[OurGargoylesRock gargoyles]], some living nightmares, and [[PhysicalGod Destiny himself hanging out by the fountain]]... and that's only scratching the surface.]]
12
13->'''Monkey God:''' OK, my turn? Ninjas.\
14'''Freya:''' What? Hey, we all agreed on this medieval knights-and-wizards theme!\
15'''Monkey God:''' So? It's my turn, my choice, I say: NINJA!
16-->-- ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' (scene from the creation of the world), [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0274.html strip #274]]
17
18What happens when AllMythsAreTrue is turned [[ExaggeratedTrope Up to Eleven]]? You get a Fantasy Kitchen Sink! Everything is true, even if it comes from vastly different origins. So not only are there really [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragons]], there are [[OurFairiesAreDifferent fairies]], [[OurGhostsAreDifferent ghosts]], [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]], {{mumm|y}}ies, [[OurZombiesAreDifferent zombies]], {{alien|Tropes}}s, [[RobotRollCall robots]], {{time travel|Tropes}}ers, [[PsychicPowers espers]], [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]], [[OurDemonsAreDifferent demons]], {{god}}s, {{eldritch abomination}}s, {{precursors}}, [[FunctionalMagic magic]], and so on. Generally a sure sign of it is when creatures from typically different genres (Sci-Fi, Horror, and Fantasy) all exist within the same world with [[CrossoverCosmology individual origins of their own]], each implausible in their own way -- leading up to a long series of [[WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief suspensions of disbelief]] rather than just one.
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20In general when you have a Fantasy Kitchen Sink, the premise is mostly used for MonsterOfTheWeek plots -- where there's one MythArc that focuses on a [[AppliedPhlebotinum fantastic element]] and a bunch of totally unrelated sub-arcs about various lesser creatures or beings. There's no overlap between the different genre creatures. The alien bounty hunters do not run into the vampires, the angels, or the superhuman (non-alien involvement) mutants; only the main characters. It's as if there are a bunch of disconnected secret [[MirrorUniverse worlds]] lurking [[DarkWorld under]] and [[SpiritWorld above]] the surface of the real world and the heroes are [[BrokenMasquerade the only ones who go between them]]. Occasionally, they do interact in the form of a MonsterMash. The AncientConspiracy really are behind everything... but so are TheFairFolk, the {{Body Snatcher}}s, and the {{Time Travel}}ers and their plans don't have ''any'' connection with each other. For example, the MageSpecies never accidentally [[LaserGuidedAmnesia erase the memories of the supernatural]] of, say, someone who's secretly a {{Ninja}} or vice versa; no matter how indiscriminate either are at enforcing the {{Masquerade}}.
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22The reason for this lack of overlap is to keep things resembling what they are supposed to resemble. If you add angels to the setting, you want people to see them as angels and give them angel-related motivations and agency. Besides, you always need to iron out many details when incorporating such beings to the setting. For example, in the case of angels, will {{Heaven}} be a recurring place in the setting? Is {{God}} going to be a character, and if so, [[OurGodsAreDifferent what kind of character]]? Anyone can see them, or are they InvisibleToNormals? It would be a good idea to stay focused on the angels while you do all this work, and leave the vampires, werewolves, elves, dwarves and the like for a later episode. However, once {{Worldbuilding}} has done its magic, everybody is sufficiently established and there is a good developed lore of who is who and which is their deal in the setting... then yes, everybody shall meet everybody, and let's get crazy with the results!
23
24Compare this to, for instance, the various ''Franchise/StarTrek'' and ''Franchise/StargateVerse'' series, or ''Series/BabylonFive'', where the "magical" aspects are AppliedPhlebotinum or the SufficientlyAdvancedAlien. They [[MagicFromTechnology aren't "real" magic.]] There are PsychicPowers, but they are given a [[HollywoodScience pseudoscientific]] {{Technobabble}} explanation. If the Science Fiction series does have bona fide magic, like ''Franchise/StarWars'', it's ScienceFantasy.
25
26The opposite of MetaOrigin, in which all of the supernatural elements of a setting come from the same single origin or event. Inevitably results in at least one character who's SeenItAll. If the fantasy elements are used to explain how reality really works, it leads to discovering the MagicalUnderpinningsOfReality.
27
28Compare ConspiracyKitchenSink, SciFiKitchenSink, AllMythsAreTrue, CrossoverCosmology, WorldOfWeirdness, WorldOfMysteries, DominoRevelation and AnachronismStew. May combine with CrapsackWorld if the Fantasy Kitchen Sink has elements of the DarkerAndEdgier. IfJesusThenAliens is the logic used creating this world. Of course, tends to result in PalsWithJesus and MonsterRoommate after a while.
29
30[[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant Not to be confused with]] the '''literal''' [[KitchenSinkIncluded fictional kitchen sinks]].
31
32----
33!!Examples:
34[[foldercontrol]]
35
36[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
37* In ''Manga/BlueExorcist'' every mythical creature from every religion or every folklore is a demon from Gehenna. The term "demon" is used to refer to all the supernatural beings whether they are malevolent or not. Basically most demons are present in the region from which their myth come from. Just to name a few there are ghosts, ghouls, zombies, goblins, krakens, classical demons, dolls, death angels. Not yetis, however. They went extinct long ago.
38* Most of the works Creator/CoolKyouShinsha writes appear to be SliceOfLife stories set in the real world but they all are part of TheVerse, and at least two of them delve into the supernatural. ''Manga/MononokeSharing'' is all about a girl living with {{Youkai}} and ''Manga/MissKobayashisDragonMaid'' is about dragons who come from a world where almost other monster, god, or demon (pretty much everything except for [[OurMermaidsAreDifferent Mermaids]], as Elma is not familar with them) you could imagine lives (possibly {{Beast M|an}}en as well depending on whether or not ''Frau Rabbit'' takes place there).
39* ''Manga/{{Dandadan}}'': The series is quite absurdist and one of the ways it demonstrates it is by how it has a little bit of everything in sci-fi, horror, and fantasy genres. The main characters are a group of teenagers with psychic powers activated by either aliens or spirits, and use it to fight aliens, yokai, cryptids, cryptids that are actually aliens (like the Loch Ness Monster and "This Man"), and sometimes have Yokai fight aliens. Doubles with ConspiracyKitchenSink since several urban legends are used in the story.
40* ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' gives you your robots (Andromon, Metalwhatevermon), your funny animals (Terriermon, Gatomon), your furries (Renamon, Leomon, Weregarurumon), your aliens (Vademon), your angels (Angemon, Angewomon, Seraphimon, Ophanimon, Magnaangemon, Lucemon), your dragons (Seadramon, Greymon, Magnadramon, Azulongmon) your demons (Devimon, Ladydevimon, Icedevimon, Skullsatamon, Marinedevimon, Daemon, Beelzemon), your {{Eldritch Abomination}}s (Apocalymon, D-Reaper), your vampires (Myotismon), your phoenixes (Birdramon, Xiuqiaomon)...yeah, something for everybody. Even snowmen like Frigimon.
41* ''Franchise/DragonBall'' built its early popularity off of this trope and ever since then has ''thrived'' off this trope. Lets see, we have: Mummies who are martial artists, vampires, talking cats that can shape shift into anything, super alien humans that can transform into giant apes, mermaids, slug-like humanoids who can regenerate limbs, demons, angels, ghosts, fairies, pirate robots, talking dragons that can grant wishes and talking rabbits that can turn ''anything'' into a carrot by touching it... oh, and they also live on the ''moon.'' To put this into perspective, look at the amount of species there are in Dragon Ball, [[http://dragonball.wikia.com/wiki/Race it's a lot]]. And there are still '''[[ExaggeratedTrope many other unnamed species]]'''.
42* One episode of ''Anime/FlintTheTimeDetective'' had the characters going back to meet Creator/HansChristianAndersen. Due to magic, all his characters (well, at least the non-nightmarish ones) came out of their stories and interacted with the protagonists...[[MindScrew which made things kinda confusing.]]
43* ''Manga/{{Gantz}}''. Oku seems to include everything that comes to his mind in the series.
44* The title character of ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'' may well have [[spoiler:reformatted her universe in order to make a Fantasy Kitchen Sink possible, because she considered any other kind of world too boring]]. In effect, ''almost everybody'' in her class turned out to be some kind of alien or supernatural, and {{fandom}} has doubts about those who haven't yet. [[TokenHuman Except Kyon, who is confirmed to be perfectly normal]], [[EpilepticTrees but fandom doesn't entirely trust that]].
45* ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers'': God, Santa Claus, [[OurFairiesAreDifferent fairies]], {{Unicorn}}s, [[AllTrollsAreDifferent trolls]], Kappa and other {{Youkai}}, {{Talking Animal}}s, at least two different species of aliens, ghosts, [[BlackMagic magic]], and {{Alternate Universe}}s all exist, in addition to the stars of the series, [[AnthropomorphicPersonification personified nations]]. Calling it a WorldOfWeirdness would be an {{Understatement}}.
46* ''Manga/HayateTheCombatButler'': let's see... super-human butlers, Robots, {{Talking Animal}}s, TimeTravel, {{Miko}}, [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot Vampire Mikos]], ghosts, demons, demonic snakes, aliens, and [[Myth/ClassicalMythology whatever Athena is.]]
47* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' is a somewhat downplayed exampled, but the going through all the parts and spin-offs, the world of the manga still has vampires, zombies, super vampires that feed on the vampires, ghosts, legitimate fortune tellers, magical martial arts, cyborgs, one character that [[AmbiguouslyHuman may or may not be an alien]], and that's not getting into [[FightingSpirit Stands]], which have granted characters every sort of superpower imagined, from TimeTravel to ElementalPowers to PsychicPowers, and sometimes they may or may not be based on [[PersonalityPowers the user's personality]].
48* Judging by the shared characters, ''Kon Kon Kokon'', ''Manga/KamichamaKarin'', and ''Doki-doki Tama-tan'' all take place in the same universe/timeline. Which is odd, because ''Kokon'' has {{obake}}, ''Kamikarin'' has magical [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek God]] rings and [[spoiler:human cloning]], and ''Tama-tan'' is something to do with alien {{Moon Rabbit}}s and magical princess school.
49* ''Manga/KeymanTheHandOfJudgement'' has beastmen, superheroes, monsters, and witches. [[spoiler: It is revealed, however, that they all share a MetaOrigin.]]
50* Slightly downplayed in ''Franchise/LittleWitchAcademia'', but aside from the franchise's main focus on human witches, there are dragons of different kinds, a yeti, a [[BasiliskAndCockatrice cockatrice]], a [[OurMinotaursAreDifferent minotaur]], a number of energy spirits (like the ones Lotte summons for assistance in magical tasks, or the fire spirits that supply Luna Nova with heating), random formless ghosts (targets of the annual Wild Hunt), not to mention the unnamed diversity of what look like elves, dwarves, fairies and other mythical creatures that form the corps of school staff and maintenance. There's also a number of magical flora (not counting a powerful witch who became a PlantPerson), including a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetable_Lamb_of_Tartary sheep tree]], mandrakes, at least some of Sucy's mushrooms, and most notably [[WorldTree Yggdrasil]], source of the series' magic at large. There's even {{Magitek}} robots, courtesy of Constanze and Professor Croix, the series' resident {{Gadgeteer Genius}}es.
51* ''Anime/MagicalPokaan'' qualifies from the get-go - a werewolf, a vampire, an android and a witch (all of them {{Cute Monster Girl}}s) living together in one house. The show then goes on to throw in tanuki, aliens, snow people, and anything else [[GagSeries for the sake of comedy]].
52* ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'':
53** Negi Springfield slowly discovers that his class of 31 "{{ordinary|HighSchoolStudent}}" middle-school girls includes a {{ridiculously human|robots}} [[BattleButler combat]] {{Robot|Girl}}, a [[CuteGhostGirl ghost]], [[SealedBadassinaCan a depowered formerly uber-powerful vampire]]/wizardess, a [[CuteWitch Sorceress]]-in-training or three (well, it does once he starts training them, anyway), a {{Ninja}}, a [[AnimeChineseGirl kung-fu master]], a lesbian albino [[HalfHumanHybrid half-Tengu]] {{samurai}} [[BodyguardCrush bodyguard]], ''two'' {{Mad Scientist}}s [[spoiler:(one of whom is apparently his {{Time Travel}}ling [[LukeIAmYourFather descendant]] from [[HumanAliens another planet]])]], a [[ButNotTooForeign half-Puerto Rican half-demon]] {{Miko}}/[[HiredGuns mercenary marksman]], a [[NunsAreFunny Nun]]/Wizardess, a potential [[HealingHands healer]] lesbian {{Ojou}}, and [[SilentBob Zazie Rainyday]] ([[spoiler:a demon princess]]) -- plus the secrets Asuna's forgotten history holds ([[spoiler:specifically, magical princess in exile]]). Just to add some spice, at least two of the girls have connections to his [[DisappearedDad long-missing father]], and unknown to him another is a relative! Negi himself, a [[TeenGenius pre-teen prodigy]] wizard, son of a legendary [[MagicKnight magical war hero]], who knows kung fu (and [[spoiler: was (unknown to him) a prince]]), who's in the process of training himself up to be an Epic Hero. That's not even counting the other characters in this series, like a famous gladiator/human WMD, and a dog hanyou. TasteTheRainbow!
54** Plus whatever the deal is with Ako (scar), Akira (super abilities), and Sakurako ([[BornLucky unnatural luck]]).
55*** It's even lampshaded at one point, as Mana had figured that [[spoiler: Zazie Rainyday]] ''couldn't'' be normal simply because hardly anybody in the class was.
56** The school itself has the WorldTree, GreatBigLibraryOfEverything, WizardingSchool(s), and an engineering club that builds HumongousMecha for the SchoolFestival. And this is in our normal world; the ENTIRE [[AnotherDimension Magic World]] is like this!
57* ''Manga/MyMonsterSecret'' has vampires, fortune gods, aliens, a GenderBender werewolf, time travellers (one of whom is also a ninja), demons, a succubus and a yuki-onna among the cast.
58* ''Manga/OnePiece'' in part plays this straight, and in part allows it to be through the AppliedPhlebotinum of the Devil Fruits. The Devil Fruits enable such things as Zombies, a Thunder God, living weapons, teleportation, Medusa, beastmen crosses with various species, living skeletons, and other mythical/fantastic concepts. Fantasy concepts in the series existing entirely independently of Devil Fruits include Fishmen, Merfolk, Sea Monsters, {{Beast M|an}}en, people from the moon (who have stunted wings), and Cyborgs. It's practically a NinjaPirateZombieRobot world, with the country of Wano rounding off the "ninja" part.
59* ''Webcomic/OnePunchMan'': Saitama follows his now utterly monotonous hero hobby, encountering {{Mutants}}, {{Cyborg}} soldiers, {{Ninja}} prodigies, HumanoidAliens, SupernaturalMartialArts masters, [[PsychicPowers Psychics]], many a corrupt SuperTeam, {{Kaiju}}, SeaMonster terrors, and just about [[FantasyKitchenSink everything else you can imagine]], all the while hoping that, someday, one of them might put up a fight that lasts longer than their MotiveRant.
60* ''Manga/RosengartenSaga'' borrows a lot of characters from famous German epic poems like the ''Literature/{{Nibelungenlied}}'', but mixes it up with other myths and stories like the ''Myth/ArthurianLegend'', ''Literature/ArabianNights'' and ''Literature/{{Beowulf}}''.
61* ''Manga/RosarioPlusVampire'' has main character Tsukune attending a school with, amongst others, vampires, witches, succubi, and emo ice-women--all of whom seem to want him.
62* ''Manga/SoulEater'': a {{Shinigami}} runs a [[ExtranormalInstitute supernatural school]] which encounters a cat that turns into a busty woman, an undead mummy pharaoh, an immortal werewolf with a magical eye, an ancient vampire, [[EldritchAbomination Insanity Incarnate]], an ancient Golem, and truckloads of witches. Gets extra points for ''staging them all on this Earth''.
63* ''Manga/SilentMobius'' centers on a Cyborg, a Mage, a Psychic, a Miko, and a Technomancer fighting a demonic invasion under the command of one of said demons' half-human spawn.
64* The first nineteen chapters of ''Manga/TakeoChanBukkairoku'' focus exclusively on Japanese mythology and youkai. Starting with chapter twenty, a European vampire moves in next door with his harem of western monster girls (including a Frankenstein's monster, a werewolf, and a medusa) with an eye towards making Takeo his next bride.
65* The Creator/{{Toonami}} [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YzmNRv7yVfk promo]] for ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'' makes the anime have something like this.
66-->'''Announcer:''' Tenchi will enter a world where alien princesses traverse the galaxy in living ships. {{Space pirates}} plunder at will. And [[SpacePolice Galaxy Police]] patrol the stars, protecting the innocent. He'll have to deal with {{bounty hunter}}s, [[SealedEvilInACan ancient demons]], {{mad scientist}}s... and [[HotSpringsEpisode shared bathroom time]].
67* ''Manga/UnderworldAcademyOverload'': Underworld welcomes "all shapes and spices". Among the background students there are a skeleton, a medusa, a dryad, a fairy, a beastman and etc.
68* ''Manga/YuushaGojoKumiaiKouryuugataKeijiban'' starts off with characters from a medieval fantasy genre and a couple of modern-day earthlings communicating with each other via a high tech, inter-dimensional message board. The story soon makes it clear that ''any'' sort of hero is welcome on the board, and it isn't long before samurais, detectives, mechas, battle maids, pilots, and magical girls enter the forum to join in on the conversations.
69[[/folder]]
70
71[[folder:Comic Books]]
72* ''ComicBook/AlphaGods'' has the Extra Humans. "Extra human" being an umbrella term that covers cyborgs, ghosts, aliens, mutants, lycanthropes and several others.
73* ''ComicBook/AstroCity'', unsurprisingly for a superhero reconstruction, has time travelers, vampires, ghosts, robots, living cartoon characters, reptilian monsters, aliens, storm elementals and ''gorillas with the heads of ants''.
74* The ''CVO: Covert Vampiric Operations'' series has this at its core. The titular squad of vampires fights all sorts of supernatural threats. In fact, the only major human member of CVO is their boss Overmars, whose orders the vampires follow without question (most of the time). Overmars's NumberTwo is an [[WickedCultured erudite demon]] named Nikodemus (who looks a little weird, being all red with large horns while wearing a suit). Their scientific expert is a nerdy zombie (who hasn't lost his mind or gained a taste for human flesh). In later issues, they get two more operatives, one of which is a human GeniusBruiser the size of a defensive lineman and a Japanese [[KatanasAreJustBetter katana]]-wielding girl who can [[VoluntaryShapeshifting turn into]] a [[SnakePeople snake-like creature]] complete with SssssnakeTalk. Their normal enemies include everything from zombies and demons to aliens and {{Eldritch Abomination}}s. They also have MagiTek called Artillica, which appears to be the focus of many issues.
75** The series lends itself to a number of {{crossover}}s. The ''Infestation'' arc starts with a new type of zombie with a HiveMind, capable of infecting any living or mechanical being, which infects one of the CVO vampires and uses her to open portals to four other realities. Conveniently, these realities turn out to be those with which we are familiar: ''Franchise/StarTrek'', ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'', ''Franchise/{{Ghostbusters}}'', and ''Franchise/GIJoe''. In each reality, our favorite characters have to fight off zombie infections, which take different forms in each world. So if you've ever asked yourself, WhatIf Kirk found himself on a planet full of zombies, or what if you had a zombie infection spread to giant robots requiring Optimus Prime to ally with Megatron, then this series is for you.
76** Following this, there's the ''Infestation: Outbreak'' mini-arc, which has aliens allying with demons to escape from the first circle of Hell and invade Earth. The CVO team requires the help of the little grey alien Archibald from the ''GroomLake'' series (apparently, the guy leading the invasion is his drunk uncle Ng, who managed to escape from the [[Area51 facility]]).
77** Finally, they find out that the aliens and demons weren't invading. They were trying to escape an invasion of their own realm by the [[EldritchAbomination Elder Gods]]. Creator/HPLovecraft is mentioned to have been under control from an Elder God when he wrote his ''Franchise/CthulhuMythos'' before a member of a secret society dedicated to keeping the Elder Gods locked away poisoned him. Oh, and this once again causes rips in dimensions, forcing other realities to deal with the Elder Gods as well: ''Franchise/GIJoe'', ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'', ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'', and ''ComicBook/{{Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles|IDW}}''.
78* Creator/DCComics is not much different. It has Greek and Roman gods, wizards, Faeries, aliens, Dinosaur Island, [[ComicBook/TheWarlordDC sword-and-sorcery tales]], Literature/DocSavage, the guy from ''Gladiator'' (the [[Literature/{{Gladiator}} superhuman novel]], not the [[Film/{{Gladiator}} anachronistic movie]]), ComicBook/TheShadow, ten different versions of {{Atlantis}}, mind-controlling worms, pre-human civilizations, sentient robots, AncientAstronauts, ComicBook/AmbushBug, ComicBook/FlexMentallo, metafiction, the [[ComicBook/GreenLantern Green Lantern Corps]], normal guys with arrows and boomerangs who can defeat Characters/{{Superman|TheCharacter}} and ComicBook/TheFlash, and on and on and on. There was also mention, in-universe, of there being full-scale battles fought between the angelic hosts of Heaven and the more villainous aspects of the Hindu pantheon at some point.
79** ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'': Many of the mythological creatures and gods are explained as products of [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve human dreams]], but there are some that exist independently of belief like the titular character and his siblings. It helps that it's split off from (and may be part of, depending on how convenient it is for a given storyline) Franchise/TheDCU.
80* ''ComicBook/DeRodeRidder'' has seen our hero Johan fight monsters from Literature/TheBible, Myth/NorseMythology, [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek Mythology]], Myth/JapaneseMythology, Myth/SlavicMythology and several other sources. He was once a knight of the round table, was trained by samurai and ninja when he explored Nippon and counts {{Myth/Merlin}} and [[Myth/ArthurianLegend Lancelot]] as his closest friends. A healthy dose of Tolkien sauce is added for flavor as well.
81* "The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec", by Jaques Tardi, features crazy scientists, demonic cults, Dinosaurs brought to life, a Neanderthal, Mummies (brought back to life), dead people brought back to life, and it is linked to WWII and the Titanic. You might not believe it by reading this, but it does make sense in context.
82* ''ComicBook/{{Fables}}'' draws upon this, however averts it with the different fables being able to interact with each other.
83* Carla Speed-[=McNeil=] describes ''ComicBook/{{Finder}}'' as "aboriginal sci-fi", set in a world of feathered dinosaurs, genetically engineered centaurs, a race of anthropomorphic lionesses that "crowns" their kings with a metamorphic virus, schools where you can major in prostitution, domed cities based on lost technology, a blind archaeology professor who wears prosthetic legs similar to an ostrich's, mechanical television kudzu, and a clan that appears to be all female and resembles Marlene Dietrich. Oh, and magic is real (albeit not as glamorous as in other worlds.) The whole thing may or may not be set on an Earth of the far-flung future, as archaeologists have dug up films like "Night Of The Hunter" and "The Producers".
84* The comic ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'' is a great example of this trope, with a few flavors of aliens, were-creatures, dragons, leprechauns, elves, trolls, genetically engineered races, races descended from advanced robots, a time traveling super-intelligent dog, and a dozen other things. Quite often their origins are related but it never nears the level of a MetaOrigin.
85* Mike Mignola's ''ComicBook/{{Hellboy}}'' comics stitch together Nazis, mad scientists, mythical monsters and folklore from all over the world (he used to be part of the Legend-verse, which included Creator/FrankMiller's ''ComicBook/TheBigGuyAndRustyTheBoyRobot'', Art Adams' ''Monkeyman And O'Brien'', John Byrne's '' Danger Unlimited'' and ''Babe'', and Mike Allred's ''ComicBook/{{Madman}}''.)
86* ''ComicBook/IZombie'' has the titular zombie, a ghost, a group of vampires, and a were-terrier. And this is all in the first two issues.
87* ''ComicBook/TheLeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen'' graphic novels incorporate absolutely ''anything'' Creator/AlanMoore can cram into a panel and not get sued over. However, they all do relate to a certain period of History, or Literary History. He does keep a coherence.
88* In Creator/DCComics' ''ComicBook/LooneyTunes'' title, Lola Bunny [[BurgerFool delivers pizzas]] to ancient gods, {{Killer Robot}}s, FishPeople, and other unusual customers.
89* ''ComicBook/{{Mampato}}'' involves time travel, and there are dinosaurs, green and gray aliens, Greek gods [[spoiler: who turn out to be {{Sufficiently Advanced Alien}}s)]], Nordic gods (probably), mythological creatures such as centaurs and harpies [[spoiler:(which turn out to be genetic experiments)]] , very nice and harmless [[LizardFolk lizard people]], [[PlantPerson plant-people]], King Arthur and Merlin, real magic, djinns, fairies and goblins, PsychicPowers, [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot an albino telepath mutant girl of the 40th century]] who is the protagonist's almost-girlfriend, etc, etc.
90* The Franchise/MarvelUniverse is undoubtedly a Fantasy Kitchen Sink, and is quite happy to have ComicBook/IronMan beat up on [[Characters/MarvelComicsLoki Loki]], or have the Characters/SilverSurfer take on Dracula, if it feels [[RuleOfCool it'll make a good story]]. Franchise/ConanTheBarbarian, Franchise/{{Transformers}}, Franchise/{{Godzilla}}, and Franchise/{{Zoids}} all used to be part of the Marvel Universe and elements from those series are still floating around occasionally bumping into the [[Characters/MarvelComicsBruceBanner Hulk]], ComicBook/GhostRider, or the ComicBook/FantasticFour. Marvel's very first character was [[ComicBook/SubMariner Namor]], the UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity-hating king of {{Atlantis}}, and his nemesis was a fire-shooting android. While characters from completely different genres usually don't mix, and lighter series don't usually cross over with the grimmer ones, nothing is ever off limits.
91** ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'' has particular fun with this, with the original main villain group consisting of two wizards, two mutants, two aliens, two time travelers, two mad scientists, and two BadassNormal crime bosses. ''By design''.
92** {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d in issue #4 of the miniseries ''Wisdom.''
93--->'''Maureen Raven:''' Oh, for God's sake, the I Ching is true? Is there anything that ''isn't'' true?
94** Kieron Gillen's ''ComicBook/JourneyIntoMysteryGillen'' and ''ComicBook/YoungAvengers'' also have fun with this. In the former, as well as Norse mythology, Loki teams up with the Son of Satan, fights Fear Lords, goes on a wetwork mission in Otherworld to deal with British mythology, encounters the ComicBook/NewMutants, and regularly crosses paths with Mephisto. The latter continues his story, now teaming him up with humanoid aliens, human mutants, dimension hopping street kid, and a [[BadassNormal girl with a bow]], while the main plot revolves around one of the kids' destiny as the Demiurge, the being destined to 're-write the rules of reality and magic'.
95** {{Discussed|Trope}} in ''ComicBook/TheUltimates2002''. Hawkeye points that he started with Fury as just a regular spy agency. Now they are sending thunder gods against aliens, and telling Captain freakin' America what to do. What can be cooler than that?
96* ''ComicBook/PathfinderWorldscape'' takes place in an alternate dimension that draws beings from all over TheMultiverse and as a result its home to pre-historic barbarians, jungle heroes, immortal humans, adventurers from fantasy worlds, elves, dwarves, Martians, evil sorcerers, demigods, snake-people and so forth. This also includes individuals from all over Earth history like Confederate soldiers, Romans, UsefulNotes/VladTheImpaler and Elizabeth Bathory.
97* ComicBook/{{Purgatori}} from Creator/ChaosComics starts off as a human angel hybrid living in ancient Egypt who gets bit by a vampire and becomes...something not a vampire. She meets demons, monster clowns, death spirits, and the devil, all to be expected but not next to Norse gods.
98* ''ComicBook/RequiemVampireKnight'' takes place in a hell-like dimension where people on Earth reincarnate as different kinds of monsters depending on their kinds of sins: the most despicable of all become vampires (the ruling elite), hypocrites become ghouls, religious fanatics are werewolves, rapists are centaurs, imperialists are lizard men, evil scientists are mummies and so forth. What happens to people who did evil by accident? They become zombies, while those victimized by vampires in life also become trapped in this world as tortured spirits. Since time is non-linear, beings from Earth's distant future can also find their way into this realm such as mutants from 23rd Century London.
99* No matter what the incarnation, ''Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles'' lives and breathes this trope. During its formative period, the original Mirage Comic had already established a universe with ninjas, aliens, mutants, time travel, demons, and super-heroes. While they were initially kept somewhat separate, they began interacting following a BrokenMasquerade moment in the fourth volume of the comic book. The fifth season finale of ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003'', for example, involved superheroes, government agents and ninjas fighting against ancient Japanese demons and their zombie army.
100** In [[ComicBook/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesIDW the IDW Comics]] continuity, our heroes are actually [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot ninjas reincarnated as mutants created using a combination of human and alien technology.]] They also time-travel and team up with ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' on three separate occassions. Prior the to Armaggeddon Game storyline, the supernatural and the technological were kept mostly separate (save for the occassional magic-wielding mutant).
101* ''ComicBook/{{Vampirella}}'' has demons under the mad god Chaos, Aztec and Egyptian deities, Arabic djinn, and more. Notably, as she was a horror comic created in 1969 that Vampirella actually predates a lot of other more mainstream comics in mixing these elements in a serious fashion.
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104[[folder:Comic Strips]]
105* ''ComicStrip/MandrakeTheMagician'': Mandrake investigates weird goings-on of whatever variety. Magic, aliens, robots, parallel universes, time travel, you name it, Mandrake has encountered it at some point.
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108[[folder:Fan Works]]
109* ''Fanfic/LostTalesOfFantasia'' incorporates [[ReferenceOverdosed every]] work Creator/{{Disney}} has ever released, so naturally it becomes this trope. So far it has included fairies, wizards, mermaids, devils, demons, [[SpaceWhale star-whales]], dragons, [[Franchise/TheMuppets Muppets]], [[MadScientist Mad Science]], superheroes, ThoseWackyNazis with [[StupidJetpackHitler super-science]] and [[{{Ghostapo}} magic]], talking animals, and [[Anime/PonyoOnTheCliffByTheSea Pon]][[OurZombiesAreDifferent yos]].
110** Its sister story, ''It's a Small World University'', adds cyborgs and aliens to the mix.
111* ''Fanfic/ACrownOfStars'': Let's see: Shinji and Asuka piloted HumongousMecha where their mothers' souls were locked to fight giant alien monsters spawned by an ancient EldritchAbomination. Then they met Daniel, a GodEmperor of an alternate dimension had ascended to godhood hundreds of millennia ago and ruled a chunk of TheMultiverse. They travelled at their dimension called Avalon where they met his wife –a witch queen had also ascended to a higher plane of existence eons ago-. As they rested and healed in a RingWorldPlanet they met and befriended humans, genetically-enhanced humans, aliens, people with PsychicPowers, shape-shifters, beast-men… and later they returned to their world to free the post-apocalyptic wastelands from a bunch of bloody dictators, leading an army armed with {{Powered Armor}}s, HumongousMecha, TransformingMecha… Regrettably they could not drive through the inter-dimensional gate the giant space-ships and jet fighters.
112* ''Fanfic/ChildOfTheStorm'' gleefully runs with this - unsurprising since two of the major canons involved are the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse and Literature/HarryPotter, with significant influences from the main Marvel Universe and ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'', all with considerable infusions and twists from various aspects of mythology, history and religion.
113* According to {{Creator/Voltalia}}'s [[http://www.fanfiction.net/u/2288836/Voltalia-the-Majestic-One FanFiction.net profile]], the [[CrossOver crossover universe]] for all of her fanfics is this.
114* ''Fanfic/GoddessRebornChronicle'' is this, which is fitting due to its parent series being ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei''. In-story, it combines elements of ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'', ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' and ''TabletopGame/TheWorldOfDarkness'', each of which are also fantasy kitchen sinks, if focusing on different mythologies.
115* ''Fanfic/HarryAndTheShipgirls'' has [[VideoGame/KanColle shipgirls]], [[Franchise/HarryPotter wizards and witches]], [[AllMythsAreTrue every fantasy pantheon in recorded history]], enough {{Yokai}} that they can create a 1:1 replica of [[Franchise/TouhouProject Gensokyo]] and still have some Yokai left over...one family even has a [[Literature/AtTheMountainsOfMadness shoggoth]] for a maid.
116* ''Fanfic/LastChildOfKrypton'': Let's see, we have a [[spoiler:HalfHumanHybrid]] superhero, cybernetic HumongousMecha,[[spoiler: aliens, more cyborgs, supervillains, SpacePolice, brief mention of Atlantis, Amazons, a magical ritual, powerful space gods]]... yep, this story qualifies.
117* This trope basically defines ''Fanfic/SonicXDarkChaos'', combining pretty much everything the author could think of - from magic to demons to angels to Lovecraftian horrors to spaceships.
118* ''Fanfic/SOE2LoneHeirOfKrypton'': This is a crossover between a SuperRobotGenre show and ''Franchise/TheDCU''. You have a genetically engineered HalfHumanHybrid superheroine and HumongousMecha pilot that fights {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, {{Robeast}}s, aliens, super-computers, has teamed up with an Amazon, has met space gods...
119* ''The Elder Scrolls: Equestria'' takes the already large kitchen sink that is [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Equestria]] and merges it with ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls''' sink, resulting in a world of talking equines, werewolves, thestrals, dragons, and other fantastical sights. Special mention goes to the variety of mythological weapons, which include [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Mjolnir]], Muramasa, and [[Myth/ArthurianLegend Excalibur]] (which fittingly belonged to a king).
120* The sheer number of [[ShoutOut Shout-Outs]], crossovers, {{Intercontinuity Crossover}}s, and esoteric references in ''Roleplay/ScaryNewsOutOfTokyo3'' qualifies it for this.
121* In ''Fanfic/CoreLine: When Universes Collide'', the aftermath is everything ever made for fiction now living in the same universe.
122* After the Transcendence, the world in the ''Fanfic/TranscendenceAU'' is basically this, with the inherent problems of introducing hundreds of new, intelligent, sapient species to humans, who don't exactly have the best track record with dealing with things they can't understand, fully explored.
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125[[folder:Film]]
126* Although ''WesternAnimation/BarbieAndTheDiamondCastle'' seems to take place in a standard FairyTale setting (dragons, trolls, girls who make their living selling flowers), it also throws [[TheMuse Muses]] (who live in a castle) into the mix.
127* ''Film/BigTroubleInLittleChina'' isn't a straight example, being a NewOldWest [[JustForFun/XMeetsY slash]] {{Wuxia}} fantasy flick, but it points out the reason that few martial arts films have consistent cosmologies;
128-->'''Egg Shen''': Of course the Chinese mix everything up. Look at what we have to work with. There's Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoist alchemy and sorcery. We take what we want and leave the rest. Just like your salad bar.
129* ''Film/TheCabinInTheWoods'' has [[spoiler:every monster in existence (or non-existence, whatever) all in one room]].
130* Similarly, the Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse followed its base closely, with various alien races, Greek gods, Atlantis, genetic mutants, immortals, spell-casting witches, Aztec fire gods, demons, cyborgs, wormholes, secret government projects, mystic artifacts, extra-dimensional entities, [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking and]] the goddamn Batman.
131* ''Film/EverythingEverywhereAllAtOnce'' is exactly what its namesake is, revolving around one woman's mind-bending experiences with other versions of herself all throughout TheMultiverse. Naturally, the further and further she gets from her own universe's timeline, the more the laws of physics start to change until we get glimpses of alternate dimensions where there are talking animals, people with hot dog fingers that ejaculate ketchup and mustard, post-apocalyptic wastelands, a physical god who can manipulate matter and atoms into anything she wants, and more.
132* The ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'' series and its related films feature dinosaurs that have survived until the present day to be mutated by atomic testing, present-day animals mutated by atomic testing, nearly a dozen different intelligent alien races trying to conquer us with various monsters and HumongousMecha, TimeTravel, mystical creatures and gods of religions that don't really exist, [[Film/GodzillaVsBiollante a massive sentient plant made by mixing a rose's DNA with Godzilla's and giving the result a human soul]], ghosts, [[Film/GodzillaVsHedorah a living pile of sludge]], two unrelated subterranean civilizations, [[Film/FrankensteinConquersTheWorld Frankenstein's monster]], Film/KingKong, humans with powerful psychic powers, a force made of humans born with supernatural strength and agility, [[Film/GodzillaVsMegaguirus a gun that fires black holes]], a giant magic gliding lizard whose very presence creates DramaticWind, a giant walrus(!), Series/{{Ultraman}}-esque superheroes, cyborgs, and so on and so forth.
133* ''Film/Hellboy2019''. Besides the [[BigRedDevil titular demon]] resurrected by [[StupidJetpackHitler Nazi superscience]], there's human-eating giants, a WWII-era superhero, an {{Evil Sorcere|r}}ss from Arthurian mythology, a man who turns into a [[PantheraAwesome were-jaguar]], the Russian mythic witch Baba Yaga, a wild boar-like fairy, a woman who can speak to ghosts, and [[spoiler:Excalibur]].
134* In ''Film/HoneyBaby'', besides the obvious Greco-Roman influence, the Hades sequence includes Egyptian iconography like pyramids and Pharaohs.
135* ''Franchise/IndianaJones'' is explicitly this, common to TwoFistedTales.
136-->'''Pooka''': ''[[http://forums.spacebattles.com/threads/malis-islamist-warlord-declares-war-on-the-west.232822/page-4#post-8438425 You know, I kind of want to know how the cosmology of the Indiana Jones-verse works, given that it has, at least, an active Judeo-Christian God, active pagan gods, extraterrestrials, and psychic phenomena. And Nazis EVERYWHERE. It's like freaking Rifts.]]''
137* The TV-Movie series ''Film/TheLibrarian'' completely runs on this, especially since it's the Librarian's job to find and store all the world's legendary and mystical items in a hidden underground room in the Metropolitan Public Library so that they're be safe and won't be used for evil purposes. The room literally has everything: Pandora's Box, The Goose That Laid the Golden Egg, H.G. Wells' time machine, Excalibur, etc.
138* The Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse, much like its original comic book roots, consists of men in suits of armor, aliens, other dimensions, gods, cosmic threats, giants, robots, raging beasts, super soldiers, high-tech spies, magic, and more. ''Film/{{The Avengers|2012}}'' is the best example since it combines characters and elements from four different films.
139** ''Film/AvengersInfinityWar'' takes this trope [[ExaggeratedTrope Up to Eleven]] — it combines the Avengers, Wakanda, the Guardians of the Galaxy, Asgard, ''and'' Stephen Strange, making for the largest Marvel mash-up in the MCU with a main character count in the ''upper twenties,'' only being topped by its [[Film/AvengersEndgame sequel]] (see below).
140** The final battle of ''Film/AvengersEndgame'' shows the nature of the setting pretty well, taking the previous example of ''Infinity War'' and just ''[[ExaggeratedTrope pushing it to its furthest extreme]]''. [[spoiler: On the villains' side, you have your bog standard [[AlwaysChaoticEvil evil]] army of [[AlienInvasion alien invaders]] toting cybernetics, hover tanks, hovercraft, a mothership, and plasma guns. On the heroes' side, you also have the standard science-fiction soldiers (including RubberForeheadAliens) and swashbuckling space heroes with their own fighter craft and guns, albeit [[KineticWeaponsAreJustBetter mostly kinetic ones]]. But then you also have other heroes who are modern humans [[MugglesDoItBetter toting modern weaponry]]. And then there are others in (Earth-created) PoweredArmor. Next ,you have some sporting SchizoTech {{Afrofuturism}} gear. After that, there's outright wizards casting spells! Add in (superhuman aliens loosely inspired by) Nordic gods, toting magic powers and ([[MadeOfIndestructium enhanced]]) medieval weaponry like swords and spears, with some of them even riding Pegasi. So on and so forth. In other words, ''Avengers: Endgame'' gives us the ''absolute LARGEST'' Marvel mash-up in the MCU of all time]].
141* ''Film/TheMummyTrilogy'' doesn't just features its titular undead monsters. Over the course of the series with the addition of its spin-off ''Film/TheScorpionKing'' series it has featured: Egyptian deities and its servants, pygmies, Chinese sorcerers, yetis, Akkadian dark lords, Sumerian deities, the minotaur, undead warriors, Mesopotamian ninjas, dragons and golems.
142* ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean'', which features Aztec and Greek (Calypso) gods, plus Davy Jones, the Fountain of Youth, the Kraken, mermaids, four different types of [[GhostPirate ghost pirates]] and working voodoo.
143* ''Film/VanHelsing'' takes various monsters from 1940s horror movies and does whatever it likes with them, regardless of the books. Both the Franchise/{{Universal|Horror}} and Film/{{Hammer|Horror}} MonsterMash movies already qualified for this trope, combining several flavors of mythology (vampires, werewolves, mummies) with the proto-scifi FrankensteinsMonster and various MadScientist villains.
144* The Film/{{VHS}} series seems to take place in a pretty [[CrapsackWorld horrifying one]]. It's home to ghosts, demons, zombies, nightmare cults, malevolent aliens, an EldritchAbomination, and an even ''more'' horrific MirrorUniverse.
145* The shared universe established by ''Film/FreddyVsJason'' is this upon combining the two franchises. For starters, there's the titular serial killers themselves. Freddy Krueger is the ghost of a child killer who kills people in their dreams, while Jason Voorhees is essentially an indestructible zombie. Aside from this, there's also psychic teenagers, dream demons, hell dimensions, demonic possession, evil spirits, and possibly even aliens if the simulations in ''Film/JasonX'' are based on real creatures. The sequel ''ComicBook/FreddyVsJasonVsAsh'' takes things even further, adding Deadites, time travel and the Necronomicon to the mix.
146[[/folder]]
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148[[folder:Literature]]
149* ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex'':
150** The "Science Side" alone includes PsychicPowers, HumongousMecha, {{Cyborg}}s, {{Artificial Human}}s, clones, genetically modified {{Talking Animal}}s, and weapons straight out of science fiction. This is due to the fact that the setting, Academy City, is [[TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture 20 to 30 years ahead]] of the rest of the world in technological development. And the majority of its residents are [[ImprobableAge superpowered schoolkids]], who treat such things as part of [[UnusuallyUninterestingSight everyday life]].
151** The "Magic Side" includes... magic, [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]], [[AllMythsAreTrue Gods and legendary weapons from every known mythology and religion]], [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], and magical ChurchMilitant organizations (one of which includes a [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot Japanese-Anglican, katana-wielding Saint]]).
152** Then there are the people known as "Gemstones" who are born with unique powers naturally and belong to neither side, and [[HumanoidAbomination whatever]] [[spoiler: Aiwass]] is.
153* ''Literature/AmericanGods'' by Creator/NeilGaiman involves gods and goddesses from several real-world mythologies fighting with various ''new'' deities born out of modern-day obsessions. One can also conclude that because these gods and their stories ACTUALLY happened simultaneously to each other, other creatures from their respective mythologies must exist as well. This is alluded to by the presence of a taxi driver who turns out to be a Djinn from Arabic mythology.
154* All fiction by N.D. Wilson counts, but especially ''Literature/TheAshtownBurials'', which features Gilgamesh, the original Dracula, Dionysus, and an assortment of obscure Celtic deities rubbing elbows with monks and mad scientists in modern-day Wisconsin.
155* Done by Delia Sherman in ''Changeling'' and ''The Magic Mirror of the Mermaid Queen'', set in New York Between, where Folk (supernatural creatures) from many different myth and fairy tale cycles live side by side and frequently interact. Logical, because of New York's multicultural immigrant population.
156* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfAmber'' by Creator/RogerZelazny spans a multiverse in which everything can be found. The first five books focus mostly on fantasy (but include machine guns), whereas the second five contain, among others, a sentient magical supercomputer.
157* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfTheImaginariumGeographica''. The entire setting, namely the Archipelago of Dreams, is one of these. Where else could there be Pandora's Box, Centaurs, Elves and Fauns, and Peter Pan just to name a few of many, many things? It's an amalgamation of every single fantasy work EVER.
158* At the time Creator/CSLewis wrote ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'', mixing fantasy creatures from different mythologies was not common practice, and raised many eyebrows. His friend [[Creator/JRRTolkien Tolkien]] was especially put off by the idea. For context, Narnia has fauns and satyrs, centaurs, griffins, giants, minotaurs, dwarves, and more.
159* ''Literature/DanteValentine'': {{Necromanc|er}}y, HealingHands, UsefulNotes/{{Voudoun}} (including what are apparently tangibly real loas), nature magic, {{golem}}s, [[OurDemonsAreDifferent various types of demon]], [[{{Satan}} Lucifer]], the list goes on. [[ScienceFantasy And this on top of]] ScienceFiction trappings like {{Hover Board}}s.
160* Creator/SimonRGreen's ''Literature/{{Deathstalker}}'' series is a Science Fiction Kitchen Sink. Clones, telepaths, aliens, rogue artificial intelligences, [[OurVampiresAreDifferent "Wampyr"]], Wolflings, cyborgs, a DecadentCourt with intrigue to match, bounty hunters, smugglers, ancient technology, professional rebels, genetic engineering, super drugs, BreadAndCircuses, and a Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet couple all appear ''in the first half of the first book''.
161** There are also ESP, {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, alternate universes, a deadly cyberspace Creator/WilliamGibson would shake his head at, nanotechnology, laser guns, personal force fields, the chick way too in love with violence, time travel, AGodAmI, and super-powered government agents. Though a few of those don't show up in the first book.
162** Two of Green's other series (''Literature/{{Nightside}}'' and ''Literature/SecretHistories'') also use this trope, and blend all of the above sci-fi elements together with an even ''greater'' diversity of fantasy elements. To put it into perspective: gods, aliens, vampires, time travel, angels, werewolves, superheroes, Arthurian legend, trolls, demons, ghosts, witches, gargoyles, eldritch abominations (including references to the actual Great Old Ones), Dracula, Carnacki the Ghost Finder, Frankenstein, Jekyll and Hyde, ghouls, and Doctor Who references are just the tip of the iceberg.
163* To the utter lack of surprise of many, ''Literature/DigitalDevilStory'', the original source material for the famous ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' video game series, features such specimens as Kerberos, Loki, [[spoiler: Izanami]] and [[spoiler: Set]].
164* The ''Literature/DirkGently'' series by Creator/DouglasAdams is characterized by the phrase "everything that mankind had chosen to believe was true": Within the two books there are alien and human ghosts, exploding starships, time travelers, artificial people and horses, inadvertently psychic persons, the Norse gods, and Faustian demons. Well, the monk was artificial, but the horse was real.
165* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'': Among other things it has wizards, witches, dwarves, trolls ([[AllTrollsAreDifferent sentient beings made of rock]]), golems, [[TheFairFolk elves]], gnomes, phoenixes, vampires, werewolves, zombies, [[TheIgor Igors]], time traveling monks, dragons, [[{{Magitek}} a magical computer]], [[TheGrimReaper DEATH]], an orangutan librarian, {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, [[TheseAreThingsManWasNotMeantToKnow Big Green Things With Teeth]], gods, bureaucratic demons, [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman Nobby Nobbs]], sentient luggage, [[ThePowerOfRock Music with Rocks In]], heroes, and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking kangaroos]]. But the series did start out as a fantasy satire, so fair enough. Given the Discworld Laws of Narrative Causality, and that belief in a thing makes it real, it's not at all surprising that all of this exists at once.
166%%** Latterly we've got Orcs, Goblins, Football and a few others.
167%%** Mrs. Cake
168* Even if they seem inconsistent with ''Literature/TheDivineComedy'''s monotheism, all the Roman myths and epics are treated as if they really happened, only with the polytheistic gods generally having their places taken by God. So, it turns out the giants who rose up against Olympus are real and have a place in Hell a little above where Satan suffers and the polytheistic blasphemer is punished even though his blasphemy was against Zeus.
169* ''Literature/DoraWilkSeries'': Christianity is all true, but the Angels and Hellians also incorporate some elements unique to Islam and Judaism. Apart from that, there are were-beasts, vampires, TheFairFolk, traditional elves, witches, Wicca, wizards, pagan deities, Egyptian and Greek gods, all the creatures of Slavic and European folklore, ghosts and a character descended from Native American shamans.
170* In ''Literature/DragonsLexiconTriumvirate'', there is magic, magic books, thunderbirds, and elementals, [[Film/TheWizardOfOz oh my!]]
171* ''Literature/TheDreamsideRoad'' involves SufficientlyAnalyzedMagic, a [[FlamingSword sword of fire]], a [[FlyingCar flying camper]], and rampant advanced technology.
172* Creator/JimButcher's ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' has wizards, Literature/TheErlking, all shapes and sizes of [[TheFairFolk faeries]], at least four kinds of [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], ghosts, demons, ghouls, boogeymen-type creatures known as "creeps" who are invisible to adults, quasi-divine {{Skin Walker}}s, five types of [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]], and a BadassSanta. There's also at least one [[Myth/NorseMythology Norse god]], two Valkyries, a squadron of Einherjar, the Svartálfar, the [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek god Hades]] (with his family and Hecate mentioned in passing), a demigoddess who served Dionysus, and other pantheon members. [[Myth/CelticMythology The Fomor]][[note]]An amphibious race of frog-like beings who were driven from the land by the Fae[[/note]], {{Tengu}}, [[EldritchAbomination Lovecraftian Old Ones]], numerous Christian/Biblical entities[[note]]Angels of Death, Guardian Angels, Archangels, and Fallen Angels[[/note]] and artifacts,[[note]]The Nails from Jesus' crucifixion, the Crown of thorns he wore, etc.[[/note]] Loa from UsefulNotes/{{Voudoun}}, BigfootSasquatchAndYeti, a brief cameo of Anansi the West African TricksterGod, [[GuardianEntity Foo Dogs]],[[note]]Part mortal mutts, part divine protectors who guard their human wards fiercely and can invoke holy powers[[/note]] and [[DragonsAreDivine two ancient Dragons]][[note]]Whose Duties included the changing of seasons and moving continents[[/note]] also make an appearance. The comic books continue with spirits of nature, one naga and [[Myth/EgyptianMythology one qarin]][[note]]A Djin with the duties of a guardian angel[[/note]] showing up. This eventually culminates in [[spoiler:ancient evil gods whose names have been systematically purged from all human records and memory]]. There is at least one example of legendary items existing in multiple cultures; namely [[spoiler:''Fidelacchius'', which bears a Nail from the Crucifixion,]] also being known as [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kusanagi Kusanagi]]. For the most part, the stories stick to European mythology, although creatures from other cultures' myths do exist. And while there are many different fantastical and magical elements present in the series, sci-fi ones are entirely absent.
173* ''Literature/AnElegyForTheStillLiving'' has knights, dragons, talking houses, sentient oceans, cyborg pigeons, cartwheeling giraffes, {{Anthropomorphic Personification}}s of death, talking dogs, ketchup rivers, a FisherKingdom, hallucinogenic perfumes, characters from Arthurian legend, reincarnation, and more!
174* In Creator/KAApplegate's ''Literature/{{Everworld}}'', five high school kids enter a different dimension cobbled together by all of the world's gods and goddesses (and thus all their respective mythologies; there's also the whole thing about "aliens," creatures from other dimensions and ''their'' own gods who have ''also'' wound up in Everworld); however characters associated with these different mythologies frequently interact. Two notable examples from the series come to mind: a plot arc from the first book has the kids find themselves amongst Vikings preparing to attack the Aztecs; the other is a scene from the ninth in which dwarves have dammed up Everworld's version of the Nile (oh, and [[spoiler:Everworld-Egypt has been conquered by Amazons]]). Add to this the fact that the gods are very present (one can climb Mt. Olympus and meet them, for example), and things can get very complicated. Add to that the existence of both Greek and Roman pantheons with Neptune and Poseidon engaged in an eternal turf war because they can't stand each other.
175* ''Literature/GarrettPI'' lives in a world where every mythological creature ever conceived (including a few new made up ones) exists.
176* ''Literature/TheGolgothaSeries'' includes gods, spirits, and magic from a variety of sources, including Christianity, Chinese mythology, and the Cthulhu Mythos.
177* ''Literature/HarryPotter'' features witches, wizards, warlocks, hags, ghosts, banshees, broomsticks, giant spiders, magic carpets, werewolves, vampires, various mythical creatures, giants, half-giants, and fairies. They even have their own non-existent creatures such as the Crumple-Horned Snorkack; Hermione scoffs at the notion that the Snorkack should exist [[ArbitrarySkepticism even though she didn't know that witches, wizards, ghosts, or monsters existed until she was 11-years-old.]]
178* ''Literature/HighSchoolDXD'' has devils, angels, fallen angels, Myth/NorseMythology, [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek Mythology]], Myth/HinduMythology, dragons, humans descending from heroes of long ago, Myth/JapaneseMythology, and the most ridiculous one being [[spoiler: ''a breast god'']]! [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer Yes. That last one is real.]]
179* Philip Pullman's ''Literature/HisDarkMaterials'' Trilogy, as you might expect for a series being set in the Omniverse. We have a steampunk-esque alternate earth with Zeppelins, an ambiguously powered psychic-flying-spider-thing, angels (gay ones, no less), witches, gypsies, talking bears, cowboys, the harpies, gun-toting priests, shape-shifting 'daemons' (although definitely not of the satanic variety), ghostly 'spectres' roughly analogous to energy vampires, fairies, whatever the hell the Mulefa are, and God. And that's only what we see. Its implied in the briefly glimpsed culminating battle that there's an awful lot more out there.
180* Creator/TomHolt lives on this trope. The same character, Lin Kortright, appears in both a book devoted to a DarkerAndEdgier Valhalla and one dedicated to a [[BlackAndGrayMorality revisionist]] St. George and the Dragon. And the ''Literature/JWWellsAndCo'' novels are even more extreme, throwing in mermaids, living swords, goblins, dragons, the Fey, the Bank of the Dead, [[spoiler: a lich]], giants, a Lieutenant Colonel in the Riders of Rohan, [[spoiler: God]], and a [[spoiler: living stapler]].
181* The "Literature/IronDruidChronicles" by KevinHearne features not only Myth/CelticMythology, but also witches, vampires, werewolves, demons, and gods from other pantheons. In fact, EVERY religion is acknowledged as true, and each god has multiple incarnations because people have so many different beliefs about them (unless it's Jesus, who only can take crucifix form for the exact same reason). Thus, the comic book Thor exists as well.
182* Literature/JakubWedrowycz has faced or fought genies, demons, vampires (including {{Dracula}} himself), sorcerers, ghosts, imps, dragons, gnomes, evil trees, aliens, merfolk, TheGrimReaper, cavemen, and an undead Vladimir Lenin. And that's still not all.
183* In ''Literature/InvadersOfTheRokujyouma'', you have a ghost, a magical girl, a subterranean miko, an alien princess and her servant, with her rival and the magical girl's rival dark magical girl appearing later. This essentially combines supernatural, magic, and sci-fi altogether.
184* ''Literature/IsThisAZombie'' has the protagonist, who is a zombie thanks to a necromancer he met. Later he meets a MagicalGirl fighting monsters and accidentally takes her power, allowing him to be a Magical Girl himself. Then there are the feuding [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Vampire ninjas]]...
185* Creator/EricFlint's ''Literature/KrimPyramid'' series has a pocket dimension which combines the Greek and Egyptian mythos which is the product of the title piece of technology which is the product of a race of what are either {{Sufficiently Advanced Alien}}s and/or monsters. [[spoiler: Adding to the mess is that at the end of the first book some of the mythological creatures wind up in our world.]]
186* Where to begin with the ''Literature/{{Shannara}}'' world? [[OurElvesAreDifferent Elves]], Dwarves, Trolls, and Gnomes are just the main species and are considered quite normal, then you toss in remnants of a post-apocalyptic future Earth like an [[AIIsACrapshoot evil supercomputer]] who captured magic users of the Shannara world to recharge its batteries, evil lizard-men, warlocks, witches, werebeasts, shapeshifters, and then the Demons trapped in the Forbidding since Faerie, which consist of every other mythological creature that has ever been conceived.
187* Mike Resnick's ''John Justin Mallory'' books take place in an alternate-universe Manhattan which happily incorporates leprechauns, unicorns, ghosts, goblins, vampires, zombies, demons, catgirls, the odd extinct talking animal and much more.
188* Transformed magical girls in ''Literature/MagicalGirlRaisingProject'' can be nearly anything, including, but not limited to, a ninja, dragon knight, robot, angel, elf, doll, centaur, samurai, pirate, stage magician, genie, vampire, or plant.
189* In Creator/GarthNix's ''Literature/KeysToTheKingdom'', elements of Christian Theology, Ancient Greek Myth, and European folklore are all present in the House (the 'epicentre of creation' wherein the bulk of the story takes place). The protagonist actually meets the Pied Piper, the Mariner (who is ''[[CoolOldGuy awesome]]''), and a towering old man who is suspiciously similar to [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Prometheus]]. These are all seamlessly blended in with the mythos of the story, and often given an interesting twist.
190* The universe of Creator/StephenKing. Vampires, ghosts, aliens, werewolves, tulpas, demons, etc. all exist in King's world and its alternate dimensions.
191* Although not too common in the film or the New Canon the ''Franchise/StarWarsExpandedUniverse'' has many things like ghosts, spirits, Dragons (including ones that float in space), space knights, multiverses, planets with medieval style cultures, centaurs, dinosaurs, reptilians, energy vampires and even time travel (Although mostly accidental). Oftentimes, magic is even equated with the force itself.
192* Carrie Vaughn's ''Literature/KittyNorville''. What starts off with just werewolves and vampires has to date come to include TheFairFolk, psychics, skinwalkers, real magicians, demons, chaos cults, ghosts, and more. Combine this with the fact AllMythsAreTrue weaves the supernatural into well-known tales of literature and religion, as well as there being an AncientConspiracy behind everything, and you're all set. A particularly effective and even insightful example occurs in book two when Ahmed explains that [[BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy Daniel of the lion's den was really a werelion]] and Enkidu of ''Gilgamesh'' was a werecreature as well.
193-->''This was thousands of years ago, remember. Humankind and animalkind were closer then--our years in the Garden together were not so long ago. And our kind, the lycanthropes, were the bridge between the two...It saddens me that the tribes in this country do not tell the old tales to one another. If we gathered to tell stories and drink more, there would not be so much fighting, yes?''
194* Creator/MercedesLackey is in love with this trope. All of her UrbanFantasy, HistoricalFantasy, and her ''[[Literature/TalesOfTheFiveHundredKingdoms 500 Kingdoms]]'' series are one big melting pot for everything from Japanese to Russian myths. Kitsune will exist next to katschei, and sidhe will exist with vampires.
195* ''Literature/TheLastVampire'' has a lot of this. It features [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Vampires]], demons, aliens, TimeTravel, spaceships, an EvilSorceror, an AGodAmI MadScientist, [[{{Ghostapo}} the Thule society]], Immortals called the [[AbsoluteXenophobe Telar]], as well as heavy use of Myth/HinduMythology and [[Myth/HebrewMythology Judaeo-Christian mythology]] in the form of [[TheMessiah Vishnu]] and [[{{Satan}} Tarana/Lucifer]] respectively.
196* ''Literature/LongsummerNights'': Vampires, demigods, demons, ghosts, fae, robots, [[AllMythsAreTrue minotaurs and gorgons]] all co-exist in the various stories.
197* ''Literature/TheMagicians'' features this. Ostensibly a novel series about a boy who attends WizardingSchool there are also dragons, demons, ghosts, pixies, and it doesn't stop there: [[spoiler: Fillory, the series' [[Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia Narnia]] analogue is real, as is the space between all these worlds. When one of the protagonist's friends goes exploring alternate worlds in an attempt to locate Middle-Earth, he even discovers that the Series/{{Teletubbies}} are real, too]].
198* ''Literature/MonsterHunterInternational'': Every monster myth known is true. Most can be killed with sufficient application of [[MoreDakka dakka]], [[StuffBlowingUp explosives]], [[KillItWithFire fire]], or combinations of the above.
199* [[TheVerse The universe most of]] Creator/ChristopherMoore's stories take place in includes demons, djinns, [[TricksterGod Coyote]], his big brother [[Myth/EgyptianMythology Anubis]], [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires (including vampire rats and cats)]], a cargo cult, a [[TalkingAnimal talking fruit bat]], a SeaMonster, Jesus, underwater HumanoidAliens riding [[OrganicTechnology artificial whales]], [[OurAngelsAreDifferent a not-too-bright angel]], a localized ZombieApocalypse, TheGrimReaper (several actually) and Celtic death goddesses.
200* In ''Literature/TheMortalInstruments'' and ''Literature/TheInfernalDevices'', warlocks, werewolves, vampires, faeries, demons, angels, and Nephilim are the main fantasy creatures; however, many others are mentioned in passing. In fact, in ''City of Bones'', Jace tells Clary that "all the stories are true." Except for mummies. No one believes in mummies[[note]]This was [[AdaptationSpeciesChange changed]] to zombies in [[TheFilmOfTheBook the movie]][[/note]].
201* So far, the [[TheVerse Naritaverse]] (which includes ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'', ''Literature/{{Durarara}}'', ''Vamp'', and ''Etsusa Bridge'') has included or confirmed the existence of {{Alchemy|IsMagic}}, [[OurHomunculiAreDifferent homunculi]], TheFairFolk ([[HeadlessHorseman dullahans, specifically]]), [[OurDemonsAreDifferent demons]], {{Talking Weapon}}s, [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]], inexplicably superpowered humans (read: [[SuperStrength Shizuo Heiwajima]]), {{Eldritch Abomination}}s (both {{humanoid|Abomination}} and decidedly un-humanoid. Cthulhu himself hasn't made any appearances, but there's a sentient black hole named Hawking somewhere out in space, and an {{Expy}} of Nyarlathotep is hanging out in [[TheMafia the Camorra]]), and possibly {{Valkyries}} (supposedly, [[spoiler:dullahans]] are fallen ones).
202* Elizabeth Bear's ''Literature/NewAmsterdam'' mixes Alternate History (the American colonies still belong to Britain in the early 20th century), SteamPunk (Zeppelins) and WeirdScience (Nicola Tesla's broadcast energy and death ray) with FunctionalMagic, vampires, werecreatures and ghosts.
203* ''Literature/OracleOfTao'' basically channels most of its material from books, anime, and video games so it has a lot of stuff going on. Robots? Check. Dinosaurs? [[PuffOfLogic Sort of]]. Dragons and magic? Check. Steampunk? Check. Angels and demons? Time travel? Eldritch Abominations? Check, check, check.
204* ''Literature/SabinaKane'': Vampires are said to descend from a mating between [[Literature/BookOfGenesis the biblical Cain]] and Lilith, Adam's first wife in Myth/HebrewMythology, and are vulnerable to apples due to their indirect connection to the Original Sin. The mages descend from the [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek goddess Hekate]]. Demons and various types of fey also exist.
205* In ''Literature/TheSecretsOfTheImmortalNicholasFlamel'', every mythological creature/deity ever is real - [[{{Masquerade}} they're just hiding]], usually in their own {{Pocket Dimension}}s or among normal people. On top of that, it's a History Kitchen Sink. Every character besides Josh and Sophie who ''isn't'' a mythical figure is a historical one. Including UsefulNotes/JoanOfArc, [[ShakespeareInFiction William Shakespeare]], and Creator/NiccoloMachiavelli.
206* In ''Shadowspawn'', the title beings are the basic for just about every legend of magic or monsters there is, especially vampires and werecritters.
207* ''Literature/TheSilverCodex'': Hanlowa and Xarissa due discuss a being called the Divine Good connecting every religion and mythology to each other because different humans have different spiritual needs, which is why Centerville has different kind of monsters and magic.
208* ''Literature/TheSookieStackhouseMysteries'': In addition to vampires, there are [[spoiler: Meaneds, shifters, Weres(not just wolves), fairies, demons, witches, goblins, and even vampire Elvis]].
209* ''Literature/SoonIWillBeInvincible'', a send-up of classic superhero comics. The world's premiere superteam consists of [[CaptainErsatz Captain Ersatzs]] for ComicBook/{{Superman}} and ComicBook/{{Batman}}, the daughter of a retired superhero and a GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe, a wizard with [[ComboPlatterPowers vaguely defined powers]], a [[TheFairFolk fairy]], a BeastMan, and a {{Cyborg}}. Their enemies are likewise suitably diverse. In a similar vein, Bill Willingham's short story ''A to Z in the Ultimate Big Company Superhero Universe'' is an extremely tongue-in-cheek look at how all these myriad, conflicting explanations and origins for the characters make such a setting innately a bit of a chaotic mess. With a few wry twists [[spoiler: such as real world physics coming into effect when the setting's super-speedster encounters a bullet]].
210* ''Literature/SpecialCircumstances'': The Special Circumstances members are from a wide range of religious or otherwise spiritual belief systems, and they all imbue their respective warriors with supernatural powers to help them fight the forces of Evil, which also come from a wide range of spiritual belief systems.
211* In Creator/JasperFforde's ''Literature/ThursdayNext'' and ''Literature/NurseryCrime'' series all fictional characters are real(ish) and exist in a parallel universe called the Well of Stories. Fictional characters do have a few traits that differentiate them from "real" people (it's complicated), but in the Bookworld all stories are true.
212* ''Franchise/TolkiensLegendarium'': Tolkien primarily used Germanic, Celtic, and Finnish mythology in ''Lord of the Rings'' and ''The Hobbit'', but his other writings establish that Middle-Earth is also home to vampires, werewolves, various fairies, mermaids, and so on.
213* ''Literature/TrappedOnDraconica'': When Ben arrives on Draconica [[DiscussedTrope he asks Erowin if the planet is one of these.]] She says no. Though she herself is a dragon humanoid and their enemies have a magic spell casting dwarf. Bottom line: its downplayed.
214* ''{{Literature/Vampirocracy}}'' not only has vampires who've taken over the world and werewolves as high-ranking police officers, but Wiccan healers, mentions of demons, and the debunked possibility of the main character being a rakshasa.
215* The ending of the Creator/RobinJarvis's ''Wyrd Museum'' series features [[spoiler:the deaths of the Nornir by the Spear of Antioch, as well as the ice giants being finally defeated by the Eye of Balor on a spinning weathercock]].
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218[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
219* In the universe of ''Series/AmericanHorrorStory'' and its spin-off ''Series/AmericanHorrorStories'' there are [[OurGhostsAreDifferent ghosts]], [[OurWitchesAreDifferent witches]] (of the [[WitchClassic classic]], [[HollywoodVoodoo Voodoo]] and {{Druid}} varieties), [[VampiresAreSexGods two]] [[LooksLikeOrlok variations]] of [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], immortals, [[VoodooZombie zombies]], loa, [[ArtificialHuman androids]], [[MadDoctor mad scientists]], cannibalistic mutants, [[FrankensteinsMonster Frankenstein-esque monsters]], [[PsychicPowers psychics]], [[AlienAbduction aliens]], [[DemonicPossession demons]], [[WingedHumanoid angels]], ancient gods, and [[OurMinotaursAreDifferent a minotaur]]. Sometimes two or more of them will directly interact, too, like a cyborg aiding the Devil's son in causing the Biblical Apocalypse or a witch being drained of blood by a vampire after being stabbed by the ghost of a serial killer.
220** In particular, season 2 (titled "Asylum") repeatedly introduces new elements from different horror sub-genres that audiences usually wouldn't expect to see mixed together, some of which are supernatural, some that are from different flavors of sci-fi horror, and some that are entirely mundane.
221* The ''Series/{{Arrowverse}}'' began with no fantasy or science fiction elements, just a guy who was unusually good at archery, only introducing a couple sci-fi gadgets (an earthquake machine and a cybernetic eye) near the end of the first season. But as the franchise continued and added more and more spin-offs, the fantasy/sci-fi elements began to build up. Demons, aliens, shrink rays, time machines, parallel universes, psychic powers, zombies, ghosts, angels, mystical totems, giant robots, talking gorillas . . . and sometimes (especially if it's a crossover) you might get most of those things all in one episode.
222* ''Series/BigWolfOnCampus'' was a kid/teen show on the ABC Family Channel in the early 2000s that featured a high-schooler who was secretly a werewolf, who fought evil creatures along with his friends. They met everything you can think of: vampires, aliens, werecats, witches, robots, Medusa, (meta)fictional characters brought into the real world, mummies, ghosts, Cerberus, ersatz versions of Frankenstein's monster and the Phantom of the Opera, demons, the Grim Reaper, and even Santa Claus.
223* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'':
224** In addition to the magical baddies, she had to deal with [[spoiler:intelligent androids]].
225** Several exceptions ran through Buffy on the 'not interacting with each other.' Most notably a werewolf hunter was eaten by a vampire, a demon-god was attacked by an [[spoiler:android]], and the military organization were combining [[spoiler:cybernetics with demon body parts (although they still did not believe in magic)]].
226** [[spoiler:Killer snot monster from outer space.]]
227** [[ArbitrarySkepticism Everyone knows leprechauns don't exist]].
228** According to Anya, Santa Claus is real, [[spoiler:and it's the same person from when the legends first started. The Problem? Santa is really a red and white furred demon that eats children]].
229** They're all real, according to Giles. He bought the Time-Life volumes; he knows what he's talking about.
230** In an episode of ''Angel'', it's revealed that at one point the Devil [[spoiler:built a robot named ''El Diablo Robotico'', which was defeated by [[MaskedLuchador Los Hermanos Numeros]]]].
231* ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}'' included witches, vampires, leprechauns, elves, zombies, harpies, mermaids, angels, demons (and possession), ghosts, genies, the Titans, gnomes, gremlins, werewolves, banshees, a siren, succubi, warlocks, a wendigo, Egyptian curses, toys coming to life, sandmen, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, unicorns, fairies, trolls, different dimensions (or something like that), Pandora, the seven deadly sins, nymphs, ogres, the Furies, the muses... even stuff that contradicts itself, like afterlife and reincarnation...
232-->"He's a leprechaun. I'm one of the Seven Dwarfs. Try to keep it straight, will ya?"
233* Parodied in an episode of ''Series/TheColbertReport'' where Creator/StephenColbert mentions that someone used a non-existent district in a state to gain votes. He then says this non-existent district has things like [[Series/LandOfTheLost1974 Sleestaks]], unicorns, leprechauns, [[Series/SesameStreet Mr. Snuffulapagus]], the {{chupacabra}}, [[TheGhost Vera]] from ''Series/{{Cheers}}'', [[ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}} Charlie Brown's teacher]] and the protagonist of ''Film/FightClub''.
234* ''Series/{{Danger 5}}'' features UsefulNotes/WorldWarII [[AlternateUniverse fought in the '60s]] in a world where the Nazis have dinosaurs with special crystal implants, bullet-proof diamond-women, golden superweapons, and Japanese robot-soldiers. In the last episode, the Danger 5 team heads for {{Atlantis}}. The inspiration is more from pulp magazines than fantasy.
235* Possibly the Ur-example of this trope in television, ''Series/DarkShadows'' started out as a mundane soap opera, but became a Fantasy Kitchen Sink with vampires, ghosts, witchcraft, mad scientists, time travel, alternate realities, and many, many cases of reincarnation.
236* The long-running British series ''Series/DoctorWho'' has taken nearly every fantasy being and concept and worked it into a story line [[LongRunners over the past 50 years]]. It usually [[DoingInTheWizard rationalizes it away]] in terms of scientific explanations. Still, not counting the other Franchise/{{Whoniverse}} series, it has featured: robot Yeti constructed by a cosmic horror story monster, AncientAstronauts, at least one version of Satan, a living personifications of Death, Order and Chaos, the Land of Fiction (just what it sounds like), vampires, werewolves, at least two different version of Atlantis, living plastic, a {{Steampunk}} HumongousMecha, an alien version of the ''Titanic'' nearly crashing into present day London and two different versions of the Loch Ness Monster.
237* ''Series/{{Fringe}}'' started off seeming like a SpiritualSuccessor to ''Series/TheXFiles'', focusing on a unit of the FBI investigating seemingly paranormal phenomena and switching between MonsterOfTheWeek episodes and MythArc episodes. However, it's gradually revealed that ''everything'' paranormal is part of one pattern that began when [[spoiler: Walter crossed into an alternate universe to save that universe's version of his son]]. In other words, what seems paranormal is only pseudo-scientific. Also, in one episode, Walter makes it clear that while he believes in many things, he draws the line at ghosts.
238* ''Series/{{Game of Thrones}}'': Westeros itself was once home to magical elf-like beings known as the Children of the Forest (though some still exist in places uninhabitable by humans), [[OurGiantsAreBigger giants]], and a race of icy zombie-like figures with glowing blue eyes [[{{Necromancer}} capable of resurrecting corpses to serve their will]], until all of them were banished to the Lands of Always Winter by a magical ice wall thousands of years ago, leading humans to assume these things to be fictional as of the beginning of the show. Despite this, modern society is not without magic either, as a a very long-lived witch from a distant country [[LivingShadow controls shadows]] and worships an unseen [[EldritchAbomination god of light]], with other witches following the same religion in different countries implied to be similarly [[ReallySevenHundredYearsOld much older than they look]]. Dragons have been [[TheMagicGoesAway extinct for hundreds of years]] in Westeros, but on another continent is a queen who hatched THREE of them and plans on returning to Westeros to reclaim her throne, which means dragons [[TheMagicComesBack won't be gone for much longer]]. A house of immortal sorcerers known as "[[EvilSorcerer The Undying Ones]]" dwell in the continent of Essos, faceless [[VoluntaryShapeshifting shapeshifting]] assassins worship a Many-Faced God, and direwolves play a prominent role in the legacy of House Stark of Winterfell. Manticores also exist, although unlike how they are portrayed in Greek mythology, they are instead closer to scorpions. Mermaids, unicorns, krakens, sphinxes, harpies and Snarks (*cough* ''Literature/{{Alice in Wonderland}}'') are believed to be fictional and are frequently thought of as fairy tales meant to frighten children, although given [[AllMythsAreTrue all the things which DO turn out to be true.....]] This trope is taken [[ExaggeratedTrope Up to Eleven]] in the book series, where there is mention of basilisks, [[GiantSpider giant ice spiders]], demons, tiger-men, walrus-men, rock goblins, selkies, Woolly mammoths, wyverns, hellhounds, and the presence of House Lothston seeming to suggest vampires may have once existed. The Great Old Ones and the Deep Ones from the works of H.P. Lovecraft are also implied to exist.
239* In ''{{Series/Ghosted}}'' the Bureau Underground was created especially to deal with Paranormal threats to mankind. In the first four episodes alone Leroy Wright and Max Jennifer deal with alien invaders (who are potentially from another universe), super strong zombies, a Sumerian demon who steals men's hearts and an escaped cryptid. Werewolves are also heavily implied to exist.
240* ''{{Series/Grimm}}'' leans pretty heavily on this trope. If there's a legend about any kind of creature, there's probably a type of Wesen responsible. A couple of legends that have come to life in the series (La Llorona and Volcanalis for example) are hinted not to be Wesen at all, but possibly something else with an even weirder supernatural explanation.
241* By some accounts, ''Franchise/KamenRider'', ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' and ''Series/MetalHeroes'' all take place in the same universe. Meaning [[Series/KyoryuSentaiZyuranger Satanist witches]], [[Series/BakuryuuSentaiAbaranger alien parasites]] and [[Series/ZyudenSentaiKyoryuger monsters spawned from an eldritch deity]] were among the independent forces involved with the extinction of the dinosaurs, there are at least [[Series/SpaceSheriffGavan two]] separate [[Series/TokusouSentaiDekaranger groups]] of SpacePolice patrolling the universe, supernatural beings like [[Series/KamenRiderKiva vampires]], [[Series/KamenRiderGhost ghosts]], [[Series/KousokuSentaiTurboranger fairies]], [[Series/TensouSentaiGoseiger angels]] and [[Series/NinjaSentaiKakuranger youkai]] all coexist with each other, and the Earth has been invaded by aliens [[Series/KamenRiderBLACKRX many]], [[Series/DengekiSentaiChangeman many]], [[Series/ChoushinseiFlashman many]], [[Series/ChikyuuSentaiFiveman many]], [[Series/GekisouSentaiCarranger many]], [[Series/SeijuuSentaiGingaman many]], [[Series/NinpuuSentaiHurricaneger many]], [[Series/KaizokuSentaiGokaiger many]], [[Series/SpaceSheriffGavan many]], [[Series/SpaceSheriffSharivan many]], [[Series/SpaceSheriffShaider many]], [[Series/KyojuuTokusouJuspion many]], [[Series/JikuuSenshiSpielban many]], ''[[Series/BlueSWAT many]]'' times.
242** ''Franchise/KamenRider'' began with [[Series/KamenRider the simple story]] of a cyborg PhlebotinumRebel battling an evil Nazi-esque organisation, then slowly began to involve ([[Series/KamenRiderAmazon multiple]]) [[Series/KamenRiderOOO ancient civilisations]], [[Series/KamenRiderBlackRX aliens]], [[Series/KamenRiderKiva every variety of monster you can think of]], [[Series/KamenRiderHibiki supernatural martial arts using the power of sound]], [[Series/KamenRiderRyuki alternate worlds you can enter through shiny surfaces]], [[Series/KamenRiderDecade a universe-destroying journey through all of those things]], and a mysterious power originating in [[Series/KamenRiderFourze space]]. They all regularly team up in movies, and nobody makes a big deal of the fact that a vampire and [[Series/KamenRiderDenO a body-swapping oni]] are kicking monsters until they explode.
243** ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' wasn't believed to count as this for some time because it was assumed each season took place in a different universe. Then along came ''Series/KaizokuSentaiGokaiger'', in which all sentai ''are'' in the same verse, and the sentai teams must teach a {{Ragtag Bunch of|Misfits}} SpacePirates how to use their powers, be they magical, technological, or anything in between. This sort of makes sense if you consider that the teams are in general specialized to fight their own villains. A team of ninja won't fare well against evil robots from another planet, after all.
244** If ''Film/OOODenOAllRidersLetsGoKamenRiders'' is anything to go by, ''Series/{{Kikaider}}'', ''Series/{{Inazuman}}'' and ''Series/KaiketsuZubat'' also take place in the same universe, so we can add {{Killer Robot}}s, {{Mutants}} and [[NebulousCriminalConspiracy Nebulous Criminal Conspiracies]] to the equation as well.
245* ''Series/KolchakTheNightStalker,'' a 1974 television series, featured Darren [=McGavin=] in the starring role of investigative newspaper reporter Carl Kolchak, who each week stumbled across a different supernatural story in the city of Chicago. All sort of fantasy was brought out, including standard-issue horror monsters (vampires, werewolves, headless bikers), mythological entities (rakshasa, a Greek immortal), sci-fi critters sprung from laboratories or the depths of the earth, and psychic phenomena (e.g. a dream-monster that manifests in the real world). In each episode, Kolchak would cover a mysterious news event, such as a murder or bizarre accidental death, discover the underlying supernatural cause, try to convince his editor and the police to no effect, and eventually defeat the monster without anyone's help, knowledge, or thanks.
246* ''{{Series/Lexx}}'' began as a blend of BlackComedy and SpaceOpera. By the end of the series they had introduced an afterlife, met the Devil, a continuing character turned into a {{Kaiju}}, went to Earth and introduced fairies and vampires.
247* ''Series/TheLibrarians2014'' has its heroes encounter beings from mythology, fairy tales, literature and urban legend. The Minotaur, dragons, a troll, a genie, a sentient house, the big bad wolf, SantaClaus, King Arthur's knights, Dorian Gray, a demon, Frankenstein's monster, The Queen of Hearts, Professor Moriarty and Prospero have all boasted screen time.
248* ''Series/TheLordOfTheRingsTheRingsOfPower'' features beings like sorcerers, wraiths, sea serpents, trolls, the angel-like beings like the Istari and Maia, the Balrog, nazguls, giant eagles and even dragons are mentioned to exist.
249* The Fae world of ''Series/LostGirl'' includes all kinds of magical beings from folklore and mythology, even those (such as Greek gods) who don't count as fae in real-life folklore. Basically, if it exists in mythology, however obscure it may be, it's real, and the main cast includes werewolves, fairies, succubi, sirens and valkyries. This is lampshaded in season two when Kenzi seems shocked that Baba Yaga from the Russian folk tales her family told her, the source of her childhood terror, was real.
250* ''Series/TheMunsters'' is a comedic version of this, with the Frankenstein monster, vampires, and a werewolf all in the same family.
251* ''Series/OddSquad'', being a world full of oddness and having an organization to fight that oddness, has a lot of fantastical creatures and elements, including jackalopes, unicorns, dragons, werewolves, aliens, spider cats, and dinosaurs, among many, ''many'' other things.
252* While ''Series/OnceUponATime'' starts with the premise that [[AllMythsAreTrue all fairy tales characters are real and living in a small town in Maine]] it has since come to include [[Myth/ClassicalMythology King Midas and a siren]], [[Myth/ArthurianLegend Sir Lancelot]], [[Literature/ArabianNights the Genie of the Lamp]], Franchise/{{Frankenstein}} and a trip to [[Literature/AliceInWonderland Wonderland]]. [[Literature/LandOfOz Oz]] is out there as well (we just saw the Wicked Witch and flying monkeys), and while the Fairy Tale World is classic fantasy, Storybrooke has a more MagicalRealism vibe. Also, although they aren't named there was a cameo by characters who were dead ringers for [[Film/OneFlewOverTheCuckoosNest Chief and Nurse Ratched]]. In Season 2 we meet [[Literature/PeterPan Captain Hook]] and the first half of third season mostly took place in Neverland. ''Series/{{Lost}}'' has been implied to be in the same universe via some brand-name products. Henry's favorite video game is ''Space Paranoids'' and an Encom billboard is seen, implying it's also the same universe as ''Film/{{Tron}}''. (A minor bad guy from Season 2 may or may not have been related to ''those'' Flynns to boot). The spinoff has even made a passing reference to ''Franchise/StarWars'' (a pair of villains contemplate feeding WesternAnimation/{{Alice|InWonderland}} to a Saarlac). The inclusion of elements from ''WesternAnimation/AliceInWonderland'', ''WesternAnimation/{{Pinocchio}}'', ''WesternAnimation/PeterPan'' and ''WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}}'' at least makes sense even though they aren't technically fairy tales, since ''Once'' airs on ABC, which is owned by Creator/{{Disney}} which adapted all those stories into movies. The inclusion of mythology, Myth/KingArthur, ''Frankenstein'' and Oz makes it a real Fantasy Kitchen Sink. The inclusion of Disney characters became very, very obvious when ABC started teasing the addition of Elsa well under a year after the film's release, and then with the inclusion of [[WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatians Cruella DeVil]] (though reinterpreted as a sorceress).
253* ''Series/PoltergeistTheLegacy'' was all about this trope. Various episodes featured ghosts, demons, vampires, werewolves, mummies and genies.
254* ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' is ''built'' on this trope. From the first episode, we have an interdimensional wizard with a ComicStrip/BuckRogers-esque robot assistant who RecruitTeenagersWithAttitude and give them superpowers and dinosaur-themed HumongousMecha so they can fight Evil Space Aliens led by an [[HumanAliens Asian-looking]] space witch. Due to its length, the show has added more and more weirdness as it goes on; one season can focus on high-tech alien police, the next, a pocket dimension inhabited by fantasy creatures. And they're almost all ''in the same universe'', with the few who aren't only inhabiting their own timeline for continuity's sake rather than the events taking place there (a robot apocalypse in one, dinosaurs surviving to modern day in the other) being too far-fetched for the prime timeline. This was taken to its most ridiculous extreme in the crossover episode with the Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles.
255* In ''Series/QuantumLeap'' the time traveling protagonist encountered a UFO, Bigfoot, a vampire, a guardian angel and a ghost throughout the show's five seasons.
256* ''Series/RoundTheTwist'' has anything and everything from ghosts to mermen to cloning machines to magic gum-leaves. Became the TropeCodifier for many episodic children's shows about weird stuff happening to a small group of [[UnfazedEveryman ordinary schoolkids]].
257* ''Series/{{Saramandaia}}'' is a telenovela which focuses on MagicalRealism, thus this trope abounds. There's a werewolf, a guy throws up his heart, another guy has wings, a girl heats up when thinking about her boyfriend, one man can do a weather forecast judging the pain of his bones and finally: a woman [[PopGoesTheHuman explodes]].
258* ''Series/{{Smallville}}'' introduced magic in Season Four after spending three seasons with just Sci-Fi (albeit really, really, ''really'' soft sci-fi). After that it never looked back, being one of the few live action comic book adaptations to embrace the Fantasy Kitchen Sink of its source material. Smallville featured aliens, TimeTravel, magic, cyborgs, clones, ghosts, the afterlife, parallel universes, the ComicBook/NewGods and more.
259* ''Series/SpecialUnit2'' was a lighter, fluffier version of ''Supernatural''. It had ogres, Cupid, mummies, gorgons, gargoyles, trolls, dragons, a scarecrow monster who fed on fear, gnomes, werewolves, mermen, witches, fairies, banshees, spider people, the Sandman, the Bogeyman, The Pied Piper, basically everything except vampires. Because the thought that vampires exist is preposterous.
260* ''Series/StargateSG1'' might not be categorized under fantasy, but there are many of the same themes in it. Though usually explained with science, a fair amount of ancient myths and conspiracy theories are brought to life in these shows, including what appear to be Roswell aliens, parasites posing as Egyptian gods, and the lost city of Atlantis. In the spin off, ''Series/StargateAtlantis,'' they have actual space vampires that don't drink blood, they suck life. Through their hands. Plus all the Arthurian references later in the series, when the main characters actually meet Merlin and Morgan le Fay (though they are explained as being Ancients) and have to do numerous quests involving pulling a sword from a stone and searching for the Holy Grail (in space).
261* The monsters of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' all fit an urban myth feeling, until they started incorporating all kinds of mythology, no matter how much of a square-peg-in-a-round-hole it was. There are ghosts, demons, angels, gods, zombies, fairies, vampires, werewolves, witches, wendigo, banshees, genies, extra-dimensional monsters, possessed trucks, a Frankenstein-style Mad Scientist who is effectively immortal through the theft of new organs, the actual Frankenstein family, Hansel and Gretal, the Land of Oz, and many more. In "Hammer of the Gods", various pantheons from around the world sent representatives in a meeting to discuss ways to stop the Judeo-Christian apocalypse. Attendees included Odin, Mercury, Kali, Baldur, and Ganesh, to name a few. So far no aliens, though. This was {{lampshade|Hanging}}d a bit when one of the brothers said that everyone knew there was no such thing as Bigfoot. Bobby Singer can usually find info on new monsters, after the writers let up on the use of John Winchester's diary. At some point, Team Winchester realized they were dealing with monsters that were entirely unprecedented (or at least hadn't appeared in centuries), such as dragons.
262** And again we have an example of playing with the "different elements not interacting with each other". Hunters tend to have wildly varying levels of knowledge about what's real and what isn't. The Winchesters have been hunting werewolves since childhood but never encountered vampires until their debut episode, while Gordon Walker hunts vamps almost exclusively. The Winchesters were blown away to encounter angels despite fighting demons regularly, but the Men of Letters apparently knew about angels as far as two generations back.
263* The [[Franchise/UltraSeries Ultraman franchise]], though what exist in the universe varies from series to series. But so far, there's been aliens, living dinosaurs, subterranean and undersea civilizations, HumongousMecha, {{Evil Overlord}}s, nature spirits, {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, demons, humans and aliens with the power to command monsters (due to being descended from the HumanoidAbomination implied to have created {{Kaiju}}), multiversal wormholes, {{Youkai}}, giant animals (mutant, natural, prehistoric), mutant humans, cybernetic clones, mirror-people, fire-people, ghosts, fantastic vehicles, evil artifacts, MIB-style organizations, superweapons, beings transformed into a toy-like form, monsters powered or formed from the souls of other monsters, an entire dimension where the ghosts of slain monsters sleep, wizards, dragons, and all sorts of crazy stuff.
264* ''Series/Warehouse13'' incorporates historical figures (with hidden attributes), fictional characters, ancient myths and urban legends. The causes of historical events are often rooted in the effects of the various artifacts the team pursues.
265* There's the obscure {{Toku}} show ''Warrior of Love: Rainbowman'' from the 70's, which unlike the the more well-known examples detailed above, which were usually fairly focused in any given show, threw in pretty much everything the writers could think of. The hero gains a slew of elemental powers from a yogi, and uses them to fight an evil organization that employs commandos, assassins, wizards, magic-spawned monsters and cyborgs.
266* ''Series/{{What We Do In the Shadows|2019}}'' focuses on four vampire roommates living together after having arrived on Staten Island hundreds of years ago. Evidently, they are not the only supernatural creatures [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin lurking in the shadows]], as there have been episodic appearances from various other vampire bloodlines (including some who look more bat-like than human, as well as energy vampires, emotional vampires, and even Vampire Elvis), werewolves, witches, ghosts, gargoyles, a possessed doll, a necromancer, a hellhound, a troll, a siren, a genie, wraiths, zombies, The Babadook, demons, fairies, Norse Valkyrie, orcs, garden gnomes, the Jersey Devil, and the hidden Night Market filled with all manner of supernatural creatures bartering covertly with one another in New York City. Two characters from the New Zealand ''[[Film/WhatWeDoIntheShadows What We Do In the Shadows]]'' film reappear as members of the Vampiric Council in the American show, which means that demonic entities, extraterrestrial flora, giant aquatic monsters, robots, and Japanese yokai [[AllMythsAreTrue exist in this universe]] as well.
267* One episode of ''Series/WhoseLineIsItAnyway'' opens with a game of ''Daytime Talkshow'', which normally spoofs one fairy tale or nursery rhyme each time, but slowly mutates into this trope. Apparently [[OffTheRails the hill that Jack and Jill fetched a pail of water from is not only the same site that Hey Diddle Diddle took place in, but belongs to a landowner that also possesses Humpty Dumpty's wall, and Peter Peter Pumpkineater's in the audience...]]
268* ''Series/WizardsOfWaverlyPlace'' seems to be something of a Fantasy Kitchen Sink series, particularly in the Wizard World, which is a loose parody of the Wizarding World from Harry Potter. Wizards, vampires, werewolves, and angels (as well as their dark counterparts) were the most prominent in the series, but other creatures have been shown throughout various episodes or have been mentioned by characters to exist, among these genies, aliens, centaurs, dragons, gargoyles, elves, fairies, Mexican cucuy, ghosts, giants, gods (including Mother Nature and Cupid), leprechauns, a talking fish that keeps secrets (albeit very poorly), goblins, ogres, superheroes, mummies, witches and zombies. Always PlayedForLaughs.
269* ''Series/TheXFiles'' is perhaps the best example of "since one paranormal thing is true, all (or at least many) paranormal things are true even when they come from different origins". To the point where there could have been an ''X-Files'' episode where the aliens arrived on Earth to colonize it only to get whaled on by the assorted other monsters of the week who get annoyed at the aliens for coming onto their turf. You have to laugh at an episode where the Smoking Man resolutely says [[FlatEarthAtheist "There is no God! What we call God is alien!"]]. God himself may not have appeared on the show, but given that there's an abundance of supernatural stuff going on regardless (demons, genies, vampires, tulpas, mutagenic horrors and Lord knows what else) there is a pretty good chance that he is jumping to conclusions. Given that the episode "All Souls" reveals that angels exist and [[spoiler: "Closure" reveals they were... [[MindScrew possibly]] responsible for saving Samantha Mulder from the Syndicate]], it's pretty certain he's just jumping to conclusions.
270[[/folder]]
271
272[[folder:Manhwa]]
273* ''Manhwa/WitchHunter'' has Myth/KingArthur, the Chinese Empire, Hindu Gods, Norse Gods, elemental spirits, {{wicked witch}}es ([[CuteWitch cute]] or [[HotWitch hot]]) with nice hats, the Moirae, a dragon [[BreadEggsMilkSquick and a]] {{necromancer}}.
274[[/folder]]
275
276[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
277* ''TabletopGame/BrikWars'' has spaceships, pirates, dragons, ''T. rexes'', Roman bikers, helicopters, pyramids, skyscrapers, knights, tanks... and that's just ''one'' page of the rule book.
278* Geoffrey [=McKinney=]'s ''Carcosa'' is an [[{{Retraux}} old-school]] supplement for the Original ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' rules, that mixes [[HeroicFantasy sword and sorcery]], CosmicHorrorStory, and [[{{Zeerust}} vintage sci-fi]].
279* In ''TabletopGame/CityOfMist'', ''any'' story can manifest within the city as Rifts, from fairytales to mythology to even real-world events that gain legend status. Naturally, that makes the City this.
280* ''TabletopGame/{{Deadlands}}'' has a vast array of supernatural creatures running around the Weird West. The AfterTheEnd spinoff ''Hell On Earth'' goes one better, with a Kitchen Sink Apocalypse, that includes nuclear devastation, zombies, and [[spoiler:the Horsemen of the Apocalypse]].
281* The original edition of ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' cites John Carter of Mars (as well as Conan, and Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser) in its foreword, despite being for "medieval wargames campaigns" according to the cover. It suggests robots and androids as examples of 'other monsters' which could be used in the game.
282** The game could be considered a Fantasy Kitchen Sink, seeing as how the monster manuals include every legendary or folklore creature in popular culture, as well as drawing from other sources (dinosaurs, anyone?), and creating their own.
283** In the first D&D adventure ever published, ''The Temple of the Frog'', the players must enter in a secluded Temple fighting mutated frogs in order to rescue a baroness. When reaching to fight the main villain, Stephen the Rock, the supplement gives this WhamLine:
284--> This fellow is not from the world of Blackmoor at all, but rather he is an intelligent humanoid from another world/dimension.
285** Yes, the first ever D&D adventure gave us an [[AncientAstronauts Ancient Astronaut]], complete with "''complete set of [[PoweredArmor battle armor]], a mobile medical kit, and a communications module''" and an actual satellite station on the orbit of the planet, pulling a GodGuise on the unsuspected natives of Blackmoor.
286** The ''TabletopGame/ForgottenRealms'' campaign setting with its FantasyCounterpartCulture collection is ''built'' on this concept, world encompassing traditional knights-and-wizards fantasy, Arabic legends, and a whole continent devoted to a mishmash of Chinese, Japanese, and Korean mythology, in different regions. Unfortunately, most works and all but one video game get set in the MedievalEuropeanFantasy regions (Sword Coast, Heartlands).
287** ''TabletopGame/{{Ravenloft}}'' could be called a HorrorKitchenSink, borrowing elements from creepy folklore (ghosts, curses), creepy novels (Dracula-style vampires, mad scientists), creepy movies (Hammer-style werewolves and gypsies), creepy sci-fi ([[FaceFullOfAlienWingWong sea spawn]], pod people), and the creepy end of every ''other'' D&D game setting.
288** ''TabletopGame/{{Spelljammer}}'' is big enough to incorporate most of the other settings. And cosmologies -- worlds riding on huge turtles? That's almost common variety...
289---> ...the writer once described his own campaign as a "cosmic vacuum cleaner, sucking up every fantasy idea that crossed its path."
290** ''TabletopGame/{{Planescape}}'' is even better. Demons, devils, angels (different types, including {{Talking Animal}}s), steam and magi-tech, real-world pantheons strewn all over the place.... [[{{Expy}} Expies]] of dozens of real-world afterlives, and so on and so fort. Part of the point of both ''Spelljammer'' and ''Planescape'' is to connect most of the ''other'' campaign settings, ''and'' they're canon to one another. The end result is an overarching setting that isn't so much a kitchen ''sink'' as it is the entire kitchen.
291* An [[{{Retraux}} old-school styled]] game called ''Encounter Critical'' is an off-beat Fantasy Kitchen Sink game, that mixes [[StandardFantasyRaces races]] and [[FantasyCharacterClasses archetypes]] from ''Franchise/StarWars'', ''Franchise/StarTrek'', and ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''.
292* ''TabletopGame/{{Everway}}'' is a game about characters who can traverse a PortalNetwork which links a [[TheMultiverse multiverse]] of fantasy worlds. As each world has its own distinctive flavor, drawing on various mostly mythical sources, the result is a bit of a mythic kitchen sink setting from the [=PCs'=] point of view.
293* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' is one big Fantasy Kitchen Sink which includes {{magitek}}, [[MyKungFuIsStrongerThanYours kung fu]], {{adventurer archaeologist}}s, [[CelestialBureaucracy scheming bureaucratic gods]], [[{{Goth}} goth princesses]], heroin-pissing dinosaurs, {{BFS}}s, [[{{Manga}} manga aesthetics]], [[FauxSymbolism mythological/biblical inspirations]], {{Beast M|an}}en, plus [[HeroicFantasy the usual vanilla blend of fantasy elements]]. It should be a train wreck, yet it all works [[RuleOfCool because of how awesome it is]].
294* ''Lords of Creation'' allows characters to move around dimensions, with each dimension having its own genre. It allows Game Masters to create worlds that freely mixes {{magic|alLand}}, with hard sci-fi, and ScienceFantasy, with any number of [[AlienSpaceBats cultures mixed in]].
295* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering''. Even if you look exclusively at the initial run of 300 or so cards, you'll find not just Lord of the Rings-type creatures like elves, dwarves, and orcs, but also angels, vampires, genies, elementals, and "a horrifying wall of living flesh, patched together from a jumble of still-recognizable body parts". Expansions since then have explored themes ranging from steampunk worlds to Japanese mythology.
296* ''TabletopGame/{{Malifaux}}''. Greek Myths? Check. Cowboys? Check. Zombie hookers? Check. Horsemen of the apocalypse? Check. Labor unions and criminal organisations? Check. Fairy tales? Pied piper on steroids? Baba yaga? Check all three. A stage troup? Check. Jack the ripper? Where did you think those zombie hookers came from? Genetic manipulation in animals? Check. CreepyChild? Check several times. Machines and cyborgs? Check. Ghosts? Check. Sandman? Check. Corrupt bureaucracy? Check. Playable? Check.
297* ''TabletopGame/MutantsAndMasterminds'' is designed to allow for this. The flexible point buy system and the distinction between "effect" (mechanics) and descriptors (flavor text with some extra meaning attached) allows characters to be built based on any comic book/fantasy/myth/sci-fi concept they can imagine in order to accommodate the Fantasy Kitchen Sink aspects of the two major comic book companies.
298** ''TabletopGame/{{Champions}}: The Super Roleplaying'' game has been doing this for two decades before ''Mutants & Masterminds'' even came along.
299* The ''TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness'' features [[TabletopGame/VampireTheMasquerade vampires with features from vampire folklore around the world]], [[TabletopGame/WerewolfTheApocalypse spirit-loving werewolves fighting a supercorporation that worships the embodiment of evil]], [[TabletopGame/DemonTheFallen demons from hell]], [[TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion a netherworld full of wraiths]], [[TabletopGame/MummyTheResurrection mummies]], psychics, [[TabletopGame/ChangelingTheDreaming changelings]], [[TabletopGame/MageTheAscension wizards based on every real world mythology/religion/occult philosophy imaginable]], and a global conspiracy of super-science secret agents who can travel through the spirit world in magic spaceships. And that's just the tip of the iceberg.
300** The ''TabletopGame/NewWorldOfDarkness'' has kept variations of the above (among others, [[TabletopGame/DemonTheDescent Demons are now sentient machines who used to serve the Cosmic Horror equivalent of a Supercomputer]]) while adding a couple of things of its own, such as [[TabletopGame/GeistTheSinEaters people brought back to life by merging with weird ghost-spirit hybrids from the Underworld]], [[TabletopGame/PrometheanTheCreated alchemically created artificial humans covering everything from the Frankenstein monsters to the classic golem]] and [[TabletopGame/BeastThePrimordial people whose soul has been replaced by a nightmare in the shape of a mythological monster]]. And that's just covering the ''official'' books; fan-made supplements allow you to add [[TabletopGame/PrincessTheHopeful magical girls at war with Silent Hill monsters]], [[TabletopGame/LeviathanTheTempest Lovecraftian Kaiju]], [[TabletopGame/GeniusTheTransgression physics-bending mad scientists who regularly fight nazis and aliens]], and [[TabletopGame/DragonTheEmbers dragons]].
301* D&D's archrival, ''TableTopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'', is this even moreso, as it includes both standard fantasy creatures like goblins, golems and dragons, some direct D&D imports released in the OGL like the aboleths, stirges and otyughs, and delightfully obscure beasties such as the [[http://kameeko.deviantart.com/art/Akhlut-90185201 akhlut]], the {{wendigo}}, the [[http://verdego.deviantart.com/art/nuckelavee-110263255 Nuckelavee]] and even cryptids like TheMothman and the {{Chupacabra}}. Also, public domain beasties such as [[EldritchAbomination those]] of the Franchise/CthulhuMythos and the [[Creator/LewisCarroll Jabberwock]] are included, and even oft-ridiculed monsters from D&D such as the [[http://www.bogleech.com/dnd/flumph.html flumph]] are brought in thanks to Wizards of the Coast not considering them brand identity like they do with beholders and mind flayers! To make it better, all of the "joke" monsters get reimagined into some of the more intricate and horrifying/awesome creatures in the setting.
302** The game also has rules for the other inhabited planets in the solar system (which is all of them, the sun, and the asteroid belt!), aliens, robots, alien robots, and superscience technology. There is a nation whose economy runs on harvesting an ancient crashed spaceship.
303* The ''Pirates Constructable Strategy Game'' by Wizkids is a naval combat game set sometime before, during, and after UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution / UsefulNotes/WarOf1812 era. When the first set came out, things were fine, but with each new expansion, they seem to be intent on adding a new crazy mechanic. They get alright justifications or are {{handwave}}d most of the time, but it is still silly. They are currently halfway between this and AnachronismStew. Some of these include:
304** Sea Monsters/[[OurTitansAreDifferent Titans]]
305** Cursed pirates
306** Submarines (based off Creator/JulesVerne)
307** Vikings ({{Handwave}}d as being northerners who believe Myth/NorseMythology)
308** Bombardiers (Ships with long-range and ''flame cannons'' attached to their decks)
309** Turtle ships (which at least existed around the time)
310** "Switchblades" (metal ships with giant pincers attached to the sides)
311** There's also a Pirates of the Caribbean expansion.
312* ''TabletopGame/{{Rifts}}'' has [[ANaziByAnyOtherName fascists]] in [[SchizoTech power armor]], dinosaurs in the swampified remnants of the American South, [[BeePeople insect aliens]] from another dimension, {{psychic|Powers}}s and FunctionalMagic, Atlantis has risen from the ocean, Mexico and the surrounding areas are overrun, and ruled, by Vampires... You get the idea. In this case it's more fantasy roach motel, as things from strange other worlds seem to rift in but they don't rift out. Weirdness diffusion, maybe?
313** Really, after about 50 {{Sourcebook}}s, it's probably easier to list what ''isn't'' featured in ''Rifts''.
314* ''TabletopGame/{{Smallworld}}'' is a strategy game which features dozens of fantasy creatures duking it out over territory. The core game alone has Humans, Halflings, Giants, Amazons, Trolls, Wizards, Ghouls, merfolk (the Tritons), Dwarves, Elves, Rat-men, Sorcerers, Orcs, and Skeletons.
315* ''TabletopGame/TechInfantry'' has vampires, mages, werewolves, weretigers, wererhinos, alien bugs, alien lions that fly, and few of them are as scary as some of the normal humans.
316* The point of ''TabletopGame/{{TORG}}'', which is about various realities invading each other. So, indeed, we can have a monster from a horror reality meet up with heroes from a technocratic reality, and so forth. In a twist, stuff from one "paradigm" tends to malfunction in others, so don't expect ray guns to work in a stone age world.
317* In ''TabletopGame/VisigothsVsMallGoths'', the most integral speculative element is the TimeTravel that hoisted the Visigoths on the Mall Goths. [[GothGirlsKnowMagic Both factions also have magic users.]] Beyond that, the store Dracula Videos is owned by "an actual werewolf," the Invisible Priest may be a ghost, and the mechanics of the Mall Boss's magic powers are left to the table to argue over. Throw in all of the elements that the adventure episodes introduce, and it's clear that the 90s called and wants its fantasy sink back.
318* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' takes the fantasy kitchen sink, flings it into the future, arms it to the teeth, changes any morals to fit a BlackAndGrayMorality, [[CrapsackWorld dumps crap all over it]], and ramps up the violence quotient [[ExaggeratedTrope to eleven]], then covers everything in skulls and spikes.
319* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' does the same thing, except without the "IN SPACE" factor.
320** In fact ''Warhammer Fantasy'' is far, far more subdued than ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}''. While it maintains the CrapsackWorld element (albeit to a ''far'' lesser extent; there are actual heroes in the setting who get along with each other), the more ridiculous elements of 40k background are omitted. It nevertheless evokes this trope pretty hard, with vampires, daemons and the undead butting heads with dwarfs, elves and Lizard people.
321** The sequel game ''TabletopGame/WarhammerAgeOfSigmar'' went the opposite direction; they deliberately built it from the ground up to be as ridiculous and epic as possible. For example in Warhammer Dwarves had mild steampunk elements; in Sigmar they have an entire SkyPirate faction.
322* ''C.J. Carella's TabletopGame/{{Witchcraft}}'' has the standard monsters of mythology, witches/wizards, Immortals with Magic-tech, gods, angels and {{Eldritch Abomination}}s and a myriad of magical traditions to draw from.
323* The ''TabletopGame/YuGiOh'' card game also has this. It features cards based on different folklores and myths from different cultures such as Japanese, Greek, European, Celtic, Nordic, etc. And the list only grows at each new edition. All the robots, superheroes, dinosaurs, ninjas...
324[[/folder]]
325
326[[folder:Toys]]
327* ''{{Toys/BIONICLE}}'' has made liberal use of this, though most of the myths have been distorted through the ages, and the rest have other things keeping them from being perfectly straight examples: cyborgs, [[ElementalPowers elemental spirits]], {{Hobbits}}, an EldritchAbomination or two, dinosaurs, FishPeople, [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragons]], mutants, [[EverythingsDeaderWithZombies zombies]], HumongousMecha and more. And yes, most of these things tend to [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot overlap with one another]].
328* The early ''Franchise/MastersOfTheUniverse'' toyline is basically this. In fact, in the ''[[Series/TheToysThatMadeUs Toys That Made Us]]'' episode of "He-Man", Val Staples even refers to it as "the kitchen sink property".
329* Mattel's Toys/MonsterHigh toy/book/media line. The Mummy's daughter is girlfriend to Medusa's son, and the Wolfman's daughter is [=BFFs=] with Dracula's and the Frankenstein Monster's progeny. And the zombie member of the cast is also the brain of the group, heh.
330* A small sampling of the ''Toys/MonsterInMyPocket'' line includes the hydra, werewolf, griffin, tengu, zombie, MadScientist, invisible man, Ganesha, Loch Ness Monster, and boogeyman.
331* Toys/{{Squishmallows}}: There are dragons, Bigfoots, fairies, gnomes, unicorns and pegasi, aliens, witches, and elves, among other fantastical creatures. This isn't even getting into the otherwise regular animals with traits of fantasy beings, like skeleton bunnies or caticorn mermaids.
332[[/folder]]
333
334[[folder:Video Games]]
335* ''VideoGame/AsurasWrath'' is a ScienceFantasy, Myth/HinduMythology and UsefulNotes/{{Buddhism}} equivalent of this, though played around with in that the story is specifically set in the extremely far future (or the extremely distant past) and that the main race of beings, Demigods, were based on upon said mentioned mythologies.
336* ''VideoGame/{{Bloodborne}}'': the main conflict of the game is a pseudo ZombieApocalypse, except the zombies are replaced by various forms of [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]]. At the beginning, the enemies are all various types of "beasts" (i.e. werebeasts/werewolves) driven to that state by a plague, or are animals or humans mutated and driven violently insane by the same plague, with the latter wielding TorchesAndPitchforks (and rifles, pistols, flamethrowers, swords, axes, cleavers...). But as the game goes on just about every kind of fantastical monster from GothicHorror shows up at one point or another, including the aforementioned werewolves and werebeasts (dozens of variants, some of which are ''big''), revenants, ghosts, vampires, gargoyles, Frankenstein-esque patchwork [[ArtificialHuman beings]], witches, and sorcerers. Then it's taken to the next level with monsters from various other fictions thrown in seemingly randomly including FishPeople, more conventional zombies, trolls, giants, hydras, yetis, blue creatures that resemble 50s depictions of TheGreys (except they were [[WasOnceAMan once human]] and can shapeshift and shoot energy blasts), BigCreepyCrawlies, half-human half-insect abominations straight out of ''[[Film/TheFly1986 The Fly]]'', and so on. Plus several bizarre creatures original to the game, like [[https://bloodborne.wiki.fextralife.com/Celestial+Centipede this thing]]. Ultimately, the origins of most of the above can be traced back to a group of [[Literature/CthulhuMythos Cthulhu-esque]] aliens known as the Great Ones, who stepped straight out of a CosmicHorrorStory.
337* ''VideoGame/BooParty'' is a HGame about a photographer crashing a HauntedHouse party to take sexy pics of various [[CuteMonsterGirl monster girls]]. The partygoers are mostly undead like ghosts, skeletons, vampires, zombies and mummies, but there's a bit of everything including humanoid animals, merfolk, demons, expies of slasher movie villains, a KillerRobot, two alien twins and a Japanese youkai.
338* ''Franchise/{{Castlevania}}'' uses undead, [[EldritchAbomination abomination]], evil, and various other strange creatures from the folklore of every culture and tradition these days. Some of them aren't even from fiction, but from real life -- dodo birds have been spotted in one game, and various games have variably-undead dinosaurs. Stock GothicHorror monsters generally form the backbone of Dracula's armies though. This is all explained by the fact that the series' incarnation of Dracula is less "Lord of Vampires" and more "East Asian Demon King", thus elevating his role to that of a ''god of the underworld.''
339* ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes'', obviously based on comic books, revels in this. During the course of a career, the average hero (or villain) will face mutants, aliens, alternate dimensional aliens, alternate dimensional mutant aliens, alternate dimensional versions of heroes, alternate dimensional versions of villains, demons, cosmic beings, mobsters, evil corporations, government conspiracies, ancient conspiracies, evil mastermind conspiracies, ghosts, spirits of nature, robots, robots animated by psychic power, Nazis, vampires, werewolves, purse-snatchers, gods, alien gods, time travel, travel to other dimensions, mercenaries, government agents, free-lance vigilantes...while coming from a background that has just as weird a mix. Want to be an archer with miraculous healing powers and force fields who can later learn to suck the souls from your enemies, all because you grew up a mutant? You can!
340* ''VideoGame/CoffeeTalk'' takes place in an average Seattle-based coffee shop in a world that's inhabited by werewolves, vampires, merfolk, orcs, dwarves, elves, succubi, ''[[LittleBitBeastly nekomimi]],'' aliens, and in Episode 2, satyrs and banshees, among others. Almost every race is represented by at least one of your customers.
341* ''VideoGame/DarkNights'': [[OurZombiesAreDifferent Zombies]], [[OurGhostsAreDifferent ghosts]], [[OurDemonsAreDifferent demons]], [[{{Shinigami}} shinigami]] and [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]] are present in the work - and this is not even the whole list. Magic, curses, and time travel exist.
342* One word: '''[[VideoGame/{{Darkstalkers}} DARKSTALKERS.]]''' A vampire? Two succubi? A zombie rocker? A catwoman? A bigfoot? A fiery alien? And that isn't even the entire roster.
343* ''VideoGame/{{Dominions}}'' draws on a wide range of mythologies for its different colorful nations, ranging from the well-known (Arcoscephale is Greece) to the obscure (Hinnom, Ashdod, and Gath are descended from the Nephilim of Jewish apocrypha). [[{{Heaven}} The Celestial Sphere]] (unseen but the source of many summons) ''alone'' contains a mixture of Hindu deities, Zoroastrian yazatas, and Abrahamic angels of both the WingedHumanoid and [[OurAngelsAreDifferent Old Testament weirdness]] varieties.
344* ''VideoGame/DungeonFighterOnline'' starts out seeming like an ordinary fantasy setting, with fairies, elves, goblins, elementals and [[LawyerFriendlyCameo "Dark Elves"]], and other similar things. But then you find the psychic puppets, ninjas, Cthulhu cultists, WWII-era soldiers, giant robots, cyborg gorillas, mutant reptilian pirates, vengeful spectres, aliens, kaiju, magical girls, [[LittleBitBeastly catgirls]], [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs magical catgirls]], {{Eldritch Abomination}}s and ''[[PlanetTerra the city of New York itself]]'', [[AfterTheEnd transformed into a magical ruined asteroid brimming with inhumanly powerful beings]]. And then there's the subplot regarding the series' creator deity opening rifts in spacetime as an aftereffect of his revival, thus carving out paths to alternate dimensions and causing [[GuardianOfTheMultiverse Time Lords]] to materialize in an attempt to stabilize the situation. It's ''that'' crazy.
345* ''VideoGame/{{Dwarf Fortress}}'' is a procedural-generated fantasy game comprised of ASCII art, allowing it to have vast swathes of content without the limit of graphics. This lets it have tons of fantasy creatures mixed in there. It also has a mode called 'Legends Mode' that allows players to explore the histories of their generated fantasy world.
346* ''VideoGame/EarthBound1994'' has zombies, ghosts, robots, psychic powers, time travel, aliens, talking animals, and the Loch Ness monster in 1980's {{Eagleland}}. It really does come across as satire.
347* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
348** On a meta level, the series started out this way until, starting with ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'', it began to distinguish itself from the [[MedievalEuropeanFantasy typical fantasy setting]] into its own ConstructedWorld. Still, much of that world is borrowed from a wide variety of real world influences, and the many of the available {{Game Mod}}s send it careening headfirst right back into FKS territory.
349** In-universe, even though the different races of Nirn may have different religions and forms of worship to varying gods or representations of similar gods, it's possible to experience the divine influence of all their religions, suggesting the coexistence of these gods and divine constructs.
350* ''VideoGame/EternalCardGame'' has, just in beta, [[Myth/JapaneseMythology oni]], [[Myth/NorseMythology valkyries]], [[Myth/ClassicalMythology centaurs, minotaurs, gorgons]], [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragons]], [[OurGiantsAreBigger giants]], [[OurElvesAreDifferent elves]], and [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti yeti]]. And that's on top of dinosaurs, gunslingers, and a mechanical race called the grenadin.
351* ''VideoGame/FallFromHeaven'', a GameMod for ''[[VideoGame/{{Civilization}} Civilization IV]]'', has every fantasy trope from orcs to dwarves to elves, with nations of wizards, vampires, ghosts, and pirates, a religion based on the worship of {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, with other random like werewolves and jinn thrown in for good measure.
352** Another mod, ''Fictionalization IV'', has a similar mishmash of things from various fantasy tropes as well as superheroes, mecha, and other tropes from sci-fi.
353* The ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' series draws on this, with gods and goddesses from every culture in the world, as well as the run of the mill robots, mummies, vampires, etc.
354* The ''VideoGame/GuiltyGear'' universe is set in a future Earth, except magic is real and regarded as normal. Some stages have skeletons of giants in them, dragons are being used [[MundaneUtility in restaurants]], vampires observe humans from the shadows, aliens appear in the woods, and ghosts and witches are common sights. Magic also coexists with ki or chakra, although they are entirely different and separate from each other.
355* ''VideoGame/IslandSaver'': An odd example with Fantasy Island as it does contain creatures from real-world mythology such as griffins and manticores but also fictional creatures like the Funny Flamingo and House Snail. However, the Mythic Wolf's Bankipedia does explicitly confirm it was inspired by Cerberus.
356* ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'': The game appears to be merely based on Greek mythology at first... then Palutena sends you into space to reclaim the Three Sacred Treasures that were stolen from her by the Space Pirates. And even Space Kraken! The game later has an AlienInvasion consisting of a HiveMind robotic race that [[CoolVsAwesome forces the gods to band together to fight]], [[spoiler:and then a being from a [[EldritchLocation dimension of chaos]] shows up and possesses Palutena to turn her against humanity]].
357* ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'' is a kitchen sink indeed. The series literally starts with the protagonist teaming up with a anthropomorphic dog and duck. And from there we have multiple worlds (though contact between them is prohibited), each with their own unique elements such as wizards, knights, a comedic Chinese Dragon, spirits, talking toys and inanimate objects, superheroes, genies, Pokemon-like creatures known as dream eaters, and even a world inside a computer powered by magic. What else would you expect from a literal cross between Disney and Final Fantasy.
358* ''Videogame/KingdomOfLoathing'' includes ''the entire list'' at the top of the page, plus ''VideoGame/NetHack'' monsters, the Penguin Mafia, Pastamancy, an actual NinjaPirateZombieRobot, [[SantaClaus Uncle Crimbo]], and an [[http://kol.coldfront.net/thekolwiki/index.php/Loathing_Legion_kitchen_sink equippable kitchen sink]] for good measure. The game is tongue-in-cheek and full of pop culture references, so anything is possible in [=KoL=].
359* [[VideoGame/KingsQuest The King's Quest series.]] Full stop. The ExpandedUniverse material [[JustifiedTrope explains the reason for it]]. Magical creatures, mythological beings, wizards, and other fantastic entities fled into a parallel dimension (called the Withdrawal in the player's guide) to escape encroaching modernity that threatened their existence.
360* The mythological allusions in ''VideoGame/LaMulana'' range freely from Japanese to Egyptian to Mesoamerican to Literature/ArsGoetia and beyond. The remake even throws in a literal Garden of Eden.
361* ''Kung Fu Chivalry'' for Macintosh has a primarily {{Wuxia}} setting, but with a BruceLeeClone and a Creator/JackieChan lookalike as its player characters and a [[HandBlast laser-fingered]] BigBad FinalBoss sporting a Literature/FuManchu 'stache and a [[AllAsiansWearConicalStrawHats conical straw hat]], along with [[DeviousDaggers knife-throwing]] [[TheTriadsAndTheTongs Triads]], [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot ninja monkeys, pirate caveman wrestlers]], [[OurOgresAreHungrier ogres]], [[AllTrollsAreDifferent trolls]], [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame dwarves]], a {{bouncer}}, [[KnightInShiningArmor a medieval knight]], a MaskedLuchador, an [[ActionGirl Amazon]] in [[{{Stripperific}} go-go attire]], a {{Shonen}}-style martial artist, and a [[EthnicMagician Middle-Eastern]] [[EvilSorcerer sorcerer]].
362* ''VideoGame/LaMulana2'' mainly features Myth/NorseMythology and [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek Mythology]], though with a lot of other things mixed in.
363* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'' no matter the incarnation has anything that would fit into any fantasy story. With Three goddesses creating a magical triangular artifact which is the most sought in the series. Witches, sorcerers, dragons, mermaids, alternate dimensions, robots, time travel, etc.
364* ''VideoGame/MarvelVsCapcom'' is inevitably going to be kitchen sink. After all, it's a crossover of two different companies that employ all manner of different genres and they all exist in the same roof. To wit, in ''VideoGame/MarvelVsCapcom3'' the roster includes (but is most certainly not limited to): supernatural martial artists, a super soldier, multiple mutants, a Japanese goddess personified as a wolf, a Chinese vampire, a succubus, a cat girl, a man in power armor, a Norse thunder god, a kid bit by a radioactive spider, multiple robots, a zombie, several badass normals, aliens, and more.
365* ''VideoGame/MarvelUltimateAlliance'' lets you have a party consisting of ComicBook/DoctorStrange, the half-vampire Characters/{{Blade}}, ComicBook/IronMan, and one of the ComicBook/XMen fight [[Characters/MarvelComicsDoctorDoom Doctor Doom]], [[Characters/MarvelComicsGalactus Galactus]], and [[Characters/MarvelComicsLoki Loki]].
366* ''VisualNovel/MonsterProm'' takes place in a high school where practically every mythological creature or cryptid from around the world is represented in at least one character. In the first game's main cast alone you can play as either a zombie, a djinn, a Frankenstein's monster, or an anthropomorphic personification of fear; with their initial potential love interests being a vampire, a demon, a mermaid, a Gorgon, a werewolf, and a ghost. The [=DLC=] adds a sentient computer and an eldritch deity to the main dateable line-up. And that's without even starting on the other [=NPCs=] and secret characters... most of whom, incidentally, can also be taken to prom.
367* The universe of ''Franchise/MortalKombat'' includes all manner of beings from the undead, corporeal souls to Japanese gods of wind and thunder. Expect a few humans to drop by as well to keep things interesting... Justified as Outworld is a collection of dimensional realms defeated in Mortal Kombat and annexed by Shao Khan. So you can expect to see centaurs, reptilians, insectoids, trees with animated human faces and other monsters in Outworld but most of them are not native to there.
368* The ''Franchise/{{Nasuverse}}'' gives us [[VisualNovel/{{Tsukihime}} Vampires]], [[VisualNovel/FateStayNight magic]] {{Church Militant}}s, demons, devils, dragons, [[AllMythsAreTrue Medusa, Medea, Hercules, Cuchulain etc.]] and all sorts of mythical beasts. Plus, reincarnation, zombies, a cosmic being or two, more magic, Japanese demons too... Most of this is merely mentioned in passing or a brief plot point, but bonus points for what is important overlapping; i.e. the Church deals with vampires, but they're also related to the Grail Wars (Archer also seems quite familiar with killing vampiric creatures like Zouken Matou) and [[VideoGame/MeltyBlood Atlas Alchemists,]] who made a weapon that can kill the previously mentioned cosmic beings. One of whom is a vampire, or something.
369* ''VideoGame/NetHack'' is probably the biggest offender, because the monsters and items are all pieced together from bunches and bunches of completely unrelated books. It can include grid bugs from ''Film/{{Tron}}'' and goblins from ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' on the same level, for example. It also has [[Literature/{{Jabberwocky}} jabberwock]] and [[Literature/TheBible the Horsemen of the Apocalypse]]. (It also has actual kitchen sinks.)
370** "One-horned, one-eyed people eaters", "[[Franchise/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy microscopic space fleets]]", "battlemechs", "[[Literature/{{Discworld}} The Luggage]]", "master lichens"(!) and various other weird critters shown instead of the real monsters when hallucinating.
371** The [=Slash'EM=] variant throws in even more stuff, the best example probably being ''[[Franchise/StarWars lightsabers]]''.
372* ''VideoGame/Onmyoji2016'' is set in Japan in the Heian period and stars all manner of Japanese yōkai, but it also features ''jiāngshī'', vampires, ''Hēibái Wúcháng'', etc., albeit [[InNameOnly barely resembling their real myth counterparts]] in order to fit in with the setting, as well as purely invented creatures.
373* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}''. It has psychics (too many to count), phoenixes (Moltres (Western) and Ho-Oh (Eastern)), a dryad (Celebi), an Arkan Sonney (Lucky Piggy - it is a white hedgehog that flees people and gives them luck if caught; Shaymin is one), and that doesn't even scratch it. The best is that it has Mew (ancestor of all Pokémon, and as such represents Darwinian evolution) and Arceus (the CREATOR Pokémon, which came before all others), which contradict each other at first glance.
374** Possibly FridgeBrilliance, as nearly all of the information in the main series games is provided by the humans from many regions and thus feature many beliefs that can contradict each other.
375** ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' takes this a step further. At various points we've had (human) psychics, [[KiManipulation aura]], non-Pokémon ghosts, HumongousMecha, magic (albeit very little), HardLight Holograms, at least one superhero (albeit an aged BatmanParody), ToonPhysics, WeirdScience, Cloning, Pirates, Ninjas and a talking cat.
376* Similarly, the ''VideoGame/QuestForGlory'' series. Each game takes the Hero to a different fictional land based on real-world mythology -- Germanic and Norse for the first, [[ArabianNightsDays Middle-Eastern]] for the second, African for the third, Slavic for the fourth and Greek for the fifth. Though there is a little bit of bleedover on occasion (a couple from the Middle-Eastern land can be found in the first game before travelling home in the second, where the player finds a Liontaur from the African land before ''he'' travels back home in the third, and the Literature/BabaYaga is encountered in the first game, and then again in the fourth when she's back in her homeland.)
377* The very premise of ''VideoGame/RakenzarnTales'' makes this inevitable. Since it's a world where every fictional character ever has been or will be there at some point, you've got a lot of different monsters, heroes and cities out there to pick from.
378* ''VideoGame/RedDeadRedemption'' and ''VideoGame/RedDeadRedemption2'' both suggest many more sinister, mysterious narratives brewing just beneath the surface of what is primarily a tale on Old Western bandits, and some of these oddities even have far-reaching implications for the world of the story far beyond the scope of what the main characters are able to perceive. Encounters with certain strangers, side quests, and Easter eggs directly allude to the existence of many fantastical things: a captured European princess; a town said to be cursed with a demonic presence, where a pentagram burns red beneath a dilapidated farmhouse at 4 in the morning, and a mentally ill woman locked away by her own family rambles numbers that lead to the town's coordinates; a vampire directly based off the bat-like Count Orlok from the 1922 German silent film "Nosferatu", who terrorizes the city of Saint Denis; witches (and their familiars); ghosts; a time traveler; a forest of whispering voices; a Gypsy seller of antique goods with the gift of clairvoyance, whose cryptic fortunes always come true; a marionette doll in the abandoned caravan of a traveling freak show who gives ominous warnings; an inventor similar to Nicola Tesla who dies creating a sentient robot; unnaturally pale, silent murderers known as the Night Folk who ritualistically kill unfortunate travelers (one of which cries in a white dress until she is approached and grows hostile, who bares a striking resemblance to the Mexican folktale of La Larona); the skeletal remains of giants; ancient Greek and Nordic gods; unidentified flying objects said to belong to enigmatic alien beings by cults who sacrifice themselves in worship of them; the strung-up animal hybrid creation of a Dr. Frankenstein-like mad scientist who sought to bring his monster to life, and a Strange Man who is very likely God, the Devil, or the Grim Reaper himself. The DLC "Undead Nightmare" further adds to this, including a zombie curse from an ancient temple mask, the steeds of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and Bigfoot.
379* In the original ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'' games, the world was a relatively normal place until it was corrupted by the sadistic meddling of the [[EvilInc Umbrella Corporation]], which used its advanced knowledge of [[PsychoSerum pharmaceuticals]], [[GeneticEngineeringistheNewNuke genetic engineering]], [[BioAugmentation gene splicing]] and [[TheVirus virology]] to create [[ZombieInfectee zombies]], [[SuperSoldier super-soldiers]] and various [[BioweaponBeast amalgamations]] [[BeastMan of humans combined with animals]], also known as "B.O.W.S" or "Bioweapons", to aid in the spread of terrorism on mankind. As later games came out, things far older than the Umbrella Corporation were revealed to exist, such as a Mold capable of turning people into deathless [[ImAHumanitarian cannibals]] and an ancient village in Eastern Europe beset with werewolf-like [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent Lycans]], ruled by [[AristocratsAreEvil four noble houses]] whose Lords [[GothicHorror represent]] a Dracula/Elizabeth Bathory-esque vampire with [[TheWormThatWalks three bloodthirsty daughters made from swarms of flies]], a Dr. Frankenstein-esque mad scientist, a "Woman in Black"-styled ghost, and a sea monster akin to the "Creature From the Black Lagoon", respectively, who worshipped a [[FallenAngel raven-winged]] [[OurWitchesAreDifferent witch]] capable of shapeshifting herself into various forms. Although these folkloric monsters were later revealed to have been created by a parasite that affected each of their DNA in different ways, the parasite itself [[EldritchAbomination may have been supernatural in nature]], as it was found by the witch in a cave in the early 19th century opposed to having been created in a lab. Coincidentally, the witch herself is [[TheReveal revealed]] to have played a [[ConnectedAllAlong significant role in inspiring the creation of the Umbrella Corporation to begin with]], meaning all the events in the series tie back to the presence of something much stranger than anything known to man.
380* ''VideoGame/RhythmStar'': There is [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent Debussy]], [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Paganini]], [[ChineseVampire Glinka]], [[ESPer Psycheker]], [[FunnyAnimal Mozza]], [[CelestialParagonsAndArchangels The Four Archangels]] [[note]]There's ArchangelUriel, ArchangelRaphael, ArchangelGabriel and ArchangelMichael[[/note]], [[AsianFoxSpirit George Sand]], [[{{Mutants}} Rimsky-Korsakov (who is mutated into a human bee)]], [[VirtuousBees Bumbee]], Brahms (an adorkable scientist boy with mouse ears) and more.
381* ''VideoGame/{{RuneScape}}'' has a massive number of races. Humans, elves, dwarves, gnomes, goblins, ogres, trolls, leprechauns, demons, an angel like race, zombies, vampires, werewolves, a race of anthropomorphic birds, a race of anthropomorphic scarab beetles who may have once been human, more than one race of Humanoid Abomination, a race of {{Oculothorax}} StarfishAliens, a {{Proud Warrior Race|Guy}} of intelligent volcanic rock golems, and even a race of who are based on the Skeksis from the movie ''Film/TheDarkCrystal'', not to mention the penguins and other animal species that are intelligent and want to take over the world. Though most of the mythology in Runescape is based on Europe, their are some places in the game that are based places like Egypt and Africa, and there also is a place based on Asia that currently is unavailable. Runescape actually seems to {{Genre Shift}} quite a lot in depending on the quest.
382* The ''VideoGame/{{SaGa|RPG}}'' series as a whole combines this with a healthy dose of SchizoTech. A notable example from the second game is the deity lineup: Ashura/Asura (Indian), Venus and Apollo (Roman), Odin (Myth/{{Nor|seMythology}}dic), and Isis (originally Egyptian, but appears here in her Greco-Roman incarnation with Athena's shield and (for some reason) [[KatanasAreJustBetter a samurai sword]]).
383* The ''VideoGame/{{Scribblenauts}}'' world exists in a mish-mash of all sorts of time periods and mythical bases. You can mix aliens, dinosaurs, Eldritch Abominations, various deities, and urban legends into a typical suburban stage as if it were a typical day, and sometimes this can happen even without Maxwell's notebook.
384* ''VideoGame/SecondLife'': The [[https://fantasyfairesl.wordpress.com/ Fantasy Faire]] is an annual festival and gathering for fantasy fans, designers, enthusiasts, role-players, and performers, with all the regions, stores and events in the festival being fantasy themed. Past themes of regions included in the faire include (but not limited to) MysticalIndia, AncientEgypt, TabletopGame/{{Chess}}, a [[AfterTheEnd post-apocalyptic]] modern city, WeirdWest, {{Steampunk}}, SouthernGothic, ''Franchise/AliceInWonderland''-inspirsed seettings, among many others.
385* ''VideoGame/TheSecretWorld'' is a perfect example of this trope. From [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], [[LovecraftianTropes Cthulu]], [[OurZombiesAreDifferent Zombies]], risen Egyptian [[TheUndead mummies]], a special MayanDoomsday event, a friendly [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Sasquatch]], SovietSuperscience, [[TheUndead Drowned Sailors]], [[HollowWorld Agartha]], [[MagicalNativeAmerican Native American Magic]], {{Wendigo}}, TheIlluminati, and [=ghosts=] and many more.
386* ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' is a CrossoverCosmology of just about every deity or mythical creature, including some genuinely obscure characters. YHVH and Vishnu have a tenuous alliance. Lucifer is buddy-buddy with Surt. Lilith and her succubi keep trying to get into the hero's pants. Loki can be found poking Taira no Masakado in the eye with a sword he stole when Athena wasn't looking. ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIIINocturne'' states unequivocally that ''one'' goddess wasn't real: the Christo-Roman-Wiccan goddess Aradia. But who's the one to tell you Aradia isn't real, you ask? [[spoiler:Aradia tells you this when you speak to her. Obviously.]]
387** This is only but the tip of the iceberg. Loki returns to screw over Beldr ''[[Myth/NorseMythology again]]''. TheFairFolk are around still lead by Oberon and Titania. Satan is a massive EldritchAbomination who has the role of the Accuser and is essentially YHVH's [[TheLancer Lancer]] / [[TheDragon Dragon]]. [[GagPenis Mara comes]] occasionally to [[DoubleEntendre rouse]] some trouble. The Four Archangels are genuinely broken up as to what to do with YHVH's monstrously despotic tendencies. Izanagi and Izanami are showing their interest in Humanity. The HorsemenOfTheApocalypse, plus the Harlot of Babylon and the Trumpeter of the End raise some hell with their partying. Literature/{{Alice|sAdventuresInWonderland}} is being kept safe by [[Literature/ArsGoetia Belial and Nebiros]]. Ishtar is [[FusionDance one half]] of Astaroth. Masakado gained control of the Four Heavenly Kings. Lucifer's become the ultimate VillainWithGoodPublicity / MagnificentBastard. Metatron, Sandalphon and Melchidezek are [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot robots]]. It's a big world. And a terribly complicated one, at that.
388** Justified, as it's at least implied that the mythical creatures, heroes and gods are, in fact, not something that existed before mankind and independently from it, but are in fact [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve born from the human collective unconsciousness]]. Some gods are flat out annoyed due to the {{Flanderization}} they have to endure courtesy of the changing attitude to religion in modern times. And in the ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'' sub-series, we see new "gods" born out of urban legends and pop culture! The only one who isn't born from this method so far is Nyx, whose very existence as death is said to be incomprehensible to humans and existed before the collective unconscious.
389** One notable point is that anthropologists classify conspiracy theory as a type of folklore. As a result, popular subjects of present-day conspiracy theories are given physical form in these games, resulting in the PlayerCharacter clashing with the likes of Chupacabras and Chemtrails, both of which were first reported in UsefulNotes/TheNineties.
390** The series has also had its share of aliens, both demons born from modern myths about aliens (the Grimies from ''Persona 1'' and the Bolontiku from ''Persona 2''), and real ones (the Cosmo Zombies from Soul Hackers and Clarion from ''Raidou Kuzunoha VS The Lone Marebito'').
391* Entries in the ''VideoGame/ShiningSeries'' almost seemed developed to act as love letters to western fantasy tropes, with some science fiction sneaking in when it could. Humanity shared the world of Rune with beings such as elves, dwarves, halflings, centaurs, and beast people of all kinds (wolves, birds, and dragons being among the most common), and lost technology abounded to allow the appearance of robots and laser weapons as well. This became much more downplayed once Sega took full control of the franchise after their parting with Camelot Software Planning, generally focusing on humans and elves in much more consistent anime-fantasy settings.
392* ''VideoGame/TheSims'':
393** ''VideoGame/TheSims2'', quite notoriously for a simulation game (albeit one that doesn't take itself very seriously), does feature this trope! Your Sims can plead with TheGrimReaper for the life of another household member, get abducted by aliens (and get a FaceFullOfAlienWingWong, [[MisterSeahorse if they're male]]), get bitten by a wolf and become a werewolf, become a vampire, come back as a zombie, get eaten by a ManEatingPlant, become a plant-like being themselves, live with Bigfoot... the list goes on. Although, being a simulation game, it fully allows the different worlds to cross, such as a sim who is a [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot zombie-alien vampiric werewolf plantsim]].
394** In ''VideoGame/TheSims3'', all of these are brought back one by one, especially in the ''Supernatural'' ExpansionPack, which introduces the same supernaturals as ''The Sims 2'' as well as introducing fairies. ''World Adventures'' and ''Island Paradise'' topped things off by introducing mummies and mermaids, respectively.
395** ''VideoGame/TheSims4'' dials it back a bit but still features ghosts, vampires, witches, aliens, mermaids, and sentient robots as playable life states. There are also [=NPCs=] of the Grim Reaper, Easter Bunny, Santa Claus, and gnomes who invade peoples' homes and cause havoc at random. Furthermore, playable Sims can become plant people and cursed skeletons for a limited time in-game. A DLC released in June 2022 has also reincorporated werewolves into the mix, due to popular demand.
396* The ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'' series features numerous different elements of fantasy mashed together, from ancient long forgotten civilizations with powerful demigods, aliens that can range from evil to friendly, superhero and shonen anime elements, light science fiction hallmarks, ghosts, monsters, magical artifacts, mutants, storybook characters, "Ghost in the Shell" type stories (i.e. the story arc of Gamma in ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure'') and so on.
397* The ''VideoGame/SoulSeries'' features fighters from a 16th-Century Eurasia where you have samurai, knights, ninjas, monks, two [[ThePaladin holy warriors]] from Greece (who worship the Greek pantheon which is confirmed to exist), a {{ghost pirate}}, an [[TheAgeless immortal whip-sword wielding English alchemist lady]] who dresses like a dominatrix, a snooty French aristocrat turned into a vampire, a {{blind|Weaponmaster}} and insane old contortionist with claws for hands, a German [[WarriorPrince Warrior Princess]] from a small principality that runs on ClockPunk, a {{golem}} created by an evil cult, and a scythe-wielding sorcerer from Babylonian times who is able to reincarnate indefinitely. Their entire conflict surrounds an [[EvilWeapon evil sword]] that spawns [[TheCorruption malfestation]] and creates several evil monsters and undead that spread across the world wreaking havoc. There is also a legendary fighter cursed with an owl head for insulting the gods, a giant colossus fought as a random encounter and a [[Literature/TheEpicOfGilgamesh Gilgamesh]] {{expy}} serving as GreaterScopeVillain of the series. And that is not even getting into the {{guest fighter}}s that include a [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Hyrulean hero]], a [[ComicBook/{{Spawn}} Hellspawn from modern times]], a [[Franchise/StarWars Jedi Master, a Sith Lord and his apprentice]] just to name a few.
398* ''VideoGame/SuperNinjaMeowCat'' contains a wide variety of fictional creatures, including anthropomorphic animals, dragons, demons (possibly {{youkai}}), robots, and [[spoiler:skeletons]].
399* ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWars OG Saga: VideoGame/EndlessFrontier''. The titular world, "Endless Frontier" consists of several mini-dimensions with varies in theme. This results in a world where {{Valkyries}} use {{Laser Blade}}s, Elves give up on bows in favor of sub-machineguns, and CyberPunk cowboys and werewolf {{Samurai}} are common sight [[spoiler:as well an EldritchAbomination or two]].
400* ''VideoGame/{{Terraria}}'' is a weird amalgamation of everything you could possibly think of: it's got [[{{BFG}} handheld missile racks]] and [[LaserBlade energy swords]], [[MushroomMan people and animals made out of mushrooms]], [[FireAndBrimstoneHell a fiery underworld]], [[InstrumentOfMurder magic lethal harps]], [[EvilTaintedThePlace spreading evil biomes]], [[AlienInvasion martian armies]], [[InsectQueen giant enemy bees]], [[TheKrampus Krampus]], [[BloodyMurder blood-slinging]] [[FlyingSeafoodSpecial giant flying squids]], [[WightInAWeddingDress zombie brides]], [[MechanicalAbomination three different types of Mecha-Cthulhu]], and a lot more.
401* The ''Franchise/TombRaider'' series feature such things as living dinosaurs, mummies, undead abominations from Atlantis, yetis, bird-men guarding temples, dragons, mutants, etc.
402* The ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' features Gensokyo, a Fantasy Kitchen Sink located in what used to be a haunted region of Japan, sealed off from the rest of the world back in the Meiji era. It exists as a FantasticNatureReserve for any {{Youkai}} or other fantastic being whose existence is threatened in the outside world due to [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve lack of belief]]. The resident {{Miko}} and her CuteWitch best friend have fought these {{Cute Monster Girl}}s: dozens of [[OurDemonsAreDifferent demons]], a few [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]], a scientist from the outside world and her assistant[[note]]although that might be a bit of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness[[/note]], about a dozen [[OurGodsAreDifferent goddesses]], thousands of [[OurFairiesAreDifferent fairies]], two [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampire sisters]], several {{Cute Ghost Girl}}s, HumanAliens, the CelestialBureaucracy, a rival miko, a few {{Ninja Maid}}s, a CatGirl and her best friend who is a [[CreepyCrows raven]] with [[RadiationInducedSuperpowers nuclear powers]], a saint and her crew, ''another'' saint and ''her''[[note]]or possibly [[AmbiguousGenderIdentity his]][[/note]] crew, an [[{{Lilliputians}} inchling]] and her friends, a [[{{Baku}} dream eater]], some more human aliens, a spirit of [[PureIsNotGood pure hatred]], a Greek goddess, even more fairies, two [[LivingStatues jizo]], a secret goddess comprised of many ther gods and titles, two leaders of animal factions [[MobWar embroiled in a constant turf war]], a [[{{Sculptors}} sculpting]] goddess literally prayed into existence by humans to lead them out of said turf war, a [[ExtremeOmniGoat sheep girl who can consume anything and everything]], and as of the 18th game, a series of [[UsefulNotes/{{Capitalism}} card sellers thriving in a market]] being ran by [[TheAlmightyDollar the personification of trade]], and ''then'' one of the card sellers proceeds to open a BlackMarket...
403* Done in the early ''VideoGame/{{Ultima}}'' games, using any fantasy creature from D&D Richard Garriott could think of plus space ships and laser guns. Averted in sequels ''VideoGame/UltimaIV''-[[VideoGame/UltimaVI VI]] as the number of monsters are narrowed down, and there are no elves, halflings, or orcs in sight, making the setting richer by showing less is more.
404** Such things were brought gradually back in ''VideoGame/UltimaOnline'' over time, with elves, orcs, ninja, samurai, paladins, necromancers, cyborgs, and anything else the developers could think of, making the setting more generic (and sorely disappointing Lord British).
405* ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'' has a [[FoulFlower a homicidal Flower]], a pair of [[DemBones Skeleton brothers]], a moody [[FishPeople Fish Lady]], an {{Otaku}} [[LizardFolk Lizard Woman]], a GlamRock TinCanRobot and a couple of middle-aged goats who likes pies, and those are just among the main characters! Among the secondary characters and random encounters we have a pair of dummies, frogs, a depressed ghost, some BigCreepyCrawlies and {{Oculothorax}}es, frost dragons, at least six dogs, bunny people, seahorses, an octopus, Temmie, weird rumped volcanos, {{tsundere}} [[SentientVehicle airplanes]], [[WreathedInFlames fire elementals]], a spider girl and some {{Cartoon Creature}}s... [[MyFriendsAndZoidberg and Jerry.]]
406* Befitting [[Creator/{{Nintendo}} Nintendo's]] [[QuirkyWork weirdest series]], the ''VideoGame/WarioWare'' series is known to indiscriminately mix up different fantasy elements in its games. The main cast alone stars [[FurryConfusion anthropomorphic animals]] (Dribble and Spitz), [[AliensAmongUs an alien]] (Orbulon), [[CuteWitch a witch]] (Ashley), [[GratuitousNinja five-year-old ninjas]] who battle ghosts and demons (Kat and Ana), [[RobotMaid a sentient robot]] (Mike), and [[AstralProjection a woman with ghostly powers]] (5-Volt).
407* Actually a card video game with a comic book based on it (or the other way around), but ''Videogame/UrbanRivals'' fit this trope. There are mad scientists, undeads, superheroes, aliens, cyborgs, radical feminists and more recently time travelers, and a lot of other things in a single badass city. They all know what the others are, so some are [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot many of these at the same time]].
408* The ''Warcraft'' universe started as a familiar HeroicFantasy setting, and now includes everything from lasers and spaceflight to kung fu pandas. If nothing else, there are at least a half-dozen assorted sources of supernatural power: The [[NatureSpirit nature-base power of the Wild Gods]] used by druids, the [[ElementalPowers elemental powers]] used by shaman, [[HolyHandGrenade the Holy Light]] used by paladins and priests, the [[TheDarkSide power of The Void]] used by shadow priests and the [[EldritchAbomination Old Gods]], the [[TheLegionsOfHell power of Fel]] used by warlocks and demons, the [[FunctionalMagic raw arcane energies]] used by mages and titan magitek, and the [[{{Necromancer}} necromantic powers]] of the Val'kyr and the Lich King. That's to say nothing of the multitude of various different ways that these forces are utilized.
409* ''Franchise/TheWitcher'' is a DarkFantasy book and video game series combining Myth/SlavicMythology with DarkerAndEdgier twists on traditional European fairy tales and myths. Elven guerillas prowl the woods, dwarven blacksmiths work the forges in the cities and Cinderella is a popular bedtime story[[note]]though it's based on Princess Cendrilla's unfortunate end at the hands of a swamp creature that devoured her whole and left behind only a single glass slipper[[/note]] but folks also have to contend with the likes of chorts, leshyis and crones.
410* ''VideoGame/ZanZarahTheHiddenPortal'': The games begins with the protagonist being sent to MagicalLand Zanzarah that has fairies, elves, dwarves, goblins, pixies, flying books, talking owls, etc.
411[[/folder]]
412
413[[folder:Web Comics]]
414* By now it's less of a question of what kind of monster will show up in ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja'' as it is which ones will not. So far there's been ninjas, vampires, dinosaurs, zombies, robots, popular fast food mascots, and more.
415* ''WebComic/AxeCop'' features dragons, witches, unicorns, aliens, robots, dinosaurs, wizards, ninjas, werewolves, vampires, superheroes, ''and'' [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking policemen]]. Everything that a 6-year-old boy would find cool. Maybe that's because the writer ''is'' a 6-year-old boy.
416* ''Webcomic/CharbyTheVampirate'' has alps, dragons, elves, a dangerous magical forest that's bigger on the inside, [[LittleBitBeastly lemuros]], bunny demons, evil cults, jackalopes, refugees from another dimension, [[BeastMan welves]], fairies, banshees, harpies, a voracious floating blue teddy bear with tentacles and laser eyes, [[RidiculouslyCuteCritter vaeltwii]], merfolk, changelings, ninjas, [[AmbiguouslyHuman ambiguously human]] monster hunters, alongside multiple flavors of vampires, werewolves and zombies among other things.
417* In ''Webcomic/DeviantUniverse'', there is at least one of every kind of creature you can think of.
418* ''Webcomic/{{Digger}}''.
419-->'''Ganesh:''' The Earth is so old, and home to so many strange things, that there is hardly an inch of ground that was never home to a shrine, or a god, or a battle, or some magical oddity. Even under the ground, you yourself have said, there are old gods, old prophecies, old lost things. It is not odd that this [[spoiler:bound god]] should be here, in this place. If anything, it is odd that we are not constantly hip-deep in such magical echoes of the past.
420* ''Webcomic/TheDragonDoctors'' features adventurer-doctors who band together to solve all the bizarre ailments that occur in a world where magic is real. So far they've turned a gorgon human, had fairies and ogres as patients, dealt with a Japanese "kotodama master" curse, extracted a ''[[Film/TheThing1982 Thing]]''-like parasite, and the backstory includes several magical wars as well as a war against Vampires and another against beast men. The local detective is an alien woman made of blue crystals. Goro has alluded to performing heart surgery on dragon (from the inside!) while wearing power armor.
421* ''WebComic/TheDreadful'' has, in less than 50 pages, presented a [[CuteMonsterGirl devil girl hero]], a centaur, an elf, a dwarf who actually manages to ''avert'' OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame, [[OurMinotaursAreDifferent a preaching minotaur]], an angel, and [[UhOhEyes whatever Jeanne Noelle]] is.
422* The main characters of ''Webcomic/EerieCuties'' are two vampires, a [[SuccubiAndIncubi succubus]], "a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melusine melusine]]," a possessing spirit of some kind, a werewolf, and a catboy; other students and teachers include witches, ghosts, fairies, ifrit (a kind of djinn), a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futakuchi-onna futakuchi-onna]], and two ''reptoids''.
423* ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'' has elves, wizards, dragons ([[OurDragonsAreDifferent of a kind]]), werewolves, elemental golems, vampires ([[OurVampiresAreDifferent sort of]]), body snatchers, chimeras, talking animals, and multiple species of aliens.
424* ''Webcomic/EverydayAbnormal'' has prehistoric magic tomes, ghosts, mythological giants, the ravening undead, magic-using naked chicks, nanotech viruses, demons, TheGreys, sentient, predatory universes, surgically enhanced {{Super Soldier}}s, and something called "The Brain Monster."
425* ''Webcomic/FindersKeepers2008'' puts it rather bluntly: "Every myth, every belief, every dream, every nightmare, they all are residents of this side. The Veil separates the Every-Day from the Every-Daydream. If Humanity has dreamt it up, you'll find it lurking around here somewhere."
426* Despite living in an AfterTheEnd scenario, ''Webcomic/{{Glorianna}}'' runs into wizards, dragons, vampires, and evil gods on a regular basis.
427* ''WebComic/GroovyKinda'' features: A beautiful female robot; a gay Neanderthal, a Neanderthal security guard, a cat girl who may be from Venus, a small six legged land Octopus named Robespierre, zeppelins, flying saucers, a discombobulationotron that can open a doorway between realities, and beatniks.
428%%* ''WebComic/GunnerkriggCourt'' takes this trope, runs with it, and makes it both awesome and internally consistent. Robots? Check. Fairies? Check. Trickster God Coyote in an eternal rivalry with The Fox Reynaerde, using Isengrim the Wolf for his nefarious purposes? Check. ... Psychic hacking? Check.
429* ''Webcomic/HereThereBeMonsters'' takes place in Kellwood city, a human city right next to the above mentioned forest, thus far the city has been seen to be mostly plagued by vampires, creepy multi-eyed poisonous critters the locals call "rat-beasts" and urispedes, so named for their bear-like size and many legs.
430* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'': Time travel, imps, ogres, human cloning, dark magic, aliens, alchemy, parallel universes, astral projection, spaceships, psychic fortune telling, genetic engineering and elder gods from beyond the universe are just some of the things to make an appearance and have a significant effect on the plot.
431* ''Webcomic/HorrorShop'' stars a group of [[ThingsThatGoBumpInTheNight closet monsters]] living in a quirky Canadian city filled with vampires, werewolves, mad scientists and more.
432* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'': Within the Housepets multiverse, Heaven, Purgatory, and Heck all exist. Heaven is occupied by PhysicalGod Celestials that take the form of Cerberus, dragons, kitsune, and gryphons. Pete's temple is occupied by kobolds and gargoyles, the latter of which proliferate outside when it's destroyed. Frost Giants, ghosts, and time travel are an afterthought on top of all of that.
433* ''Webcomic/IrregularWebcomic'' is this, and bad puns.
434* As the page quote implies, ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' has its own version with justification: the world was made by three pantheons (the Norse and Babylonian gods, along with the twelve animal spirits of the Chinese Zodiac) and taking turns to ensure a fair representation for all. [[spoiler:This is actually not the first world the three sets of gods made; the original, which was made along with the Greek gods, was created amongst too much in-fighting and led to an EldritchAbomination that killed the Olympians and destroyed the original world, which is why the gods cooperated on the new world, which serves as the monster's prison.]]
435* ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' in the biggest way. One story arc had a [[TheLegionsOfHell Demonic Invader]] hurled back in time by a MadScientist's ray gun. Another had a [[TalkingAnimal talking rabbit]] wage war on a mutated, alien SantaClaus, only to get hurled into another dimension where TimeStandsStill and SpacePirates reign supreme. And another had the same MadScientist, a witch, and a BadassNormal with a [[EmpathicWeapon talking sword]] break into a [[OurZombiesAreDifferent zombie]] lair to recover GovernmentConspiracy files on a {{Brainwashed}}, immortal assassin who has the potential to [[YouCantFightFate change or even destroy the Web of Fate]]. And that's not even getting into the satanic kittens. And the Sampire!
436* ''Webcomic/TheSnailFactory'' features a menagerie of bizarre creatures, including various gods, demons and deities from different cultures, mutants, prehistoric creatures, mermaids and intelligent fungus.
437[[/folder]]
438
439[[folder:Web Original]]
440* ''Roleplay/EquestrianLegends'' has, of course, everything in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' canon, as well as other creatures from myth and legend.
441* As it riffs on classic comic book tropes and stories the superhero-filled world in ''Blog/HowToHero'' is chock full of magical and mystical elements. From werewolf colonies on Jupiter's moons to the Ogre-Achievers, a team of superhero ogres to the fact that the guide takes for granted the fact that everybody has at least one mystic living in their town, there's certainly no shortage of fantasy elements here.
442* ''Podcast/LessIsMorgue'' is this in spades. Their weird, monster-filled version of Tallahassee has [[OurGhoulsAreCreepier Ghouls]], [[SillySpook Ghosts]], [[EldritchAbomination Eldritch Abominations]], [[FriendlyZombie Zombies]], [[OurDemonsAreDifferent Demons]], Urban Legend beings like [[MirrorMonster Bloody Mary]], the [[Franchise/TheSlenderManMythos Slender Man]], [[TheGrimReaper Death]] himself, and the humanoid personification of [[OnlyInFlorida Florida]].
443* ''Website/{{Neopets}}'' is filled with a huge variety of locales and pets that fit with fantasy, mythological, and science-fiction themes. These include Aliens, Faeries, Dragons/Medieval Fantasy, Dinosaurs, Ghosts, Robots, Pirates, and Cute Fluffy Things
444* ''Literature/{{Phaeton}}'' in general, but myths are not always accurate.
445* ''Literature/{{Pact}}'' seems to operate under the idea that all mythologies are true, with creatures from Celtic, Norse, and Greek mythology being showcased, as well as gods.
446* ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'''s ''Blamimations with Kris and Scott'': One of the sketches, "Monster Nash," features a character who is secretly all monsters. The intro shows him being cursed by a mummy, stabbed by a werewolf bone, and bitten by a zombie vampire.
447* ''Literature/TheQuestportChronicles'' include [[OurElvesAreDifferent elves]], [[OurFairiesAreDifferent fairies, pixies]], {{Hobbits}}, [[GripingAboutGremlins gremlins]], [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragons]], {{Unicorn}}s, [[WingedHumanoid Avia]], [[AllTrollsAreDifferent trolls]], [[OurOgresAreHungrier ogres]], [[SeaMonster sea monsters]], [[FriendlyNeighborhoodVampire vampires]], and [[OurDemonsAreDifferent multiple kinds of demons]].
448* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': The titular Foundation has contained and/or fought everything from space aliens, gods, cryptids, talking animals, creepy footage, [[EldritchAbomination Eldritch Abominations]], [[BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy famous people from history that turn out to be related to the supernatural]], the multiverse, demons, ''so many'' weapons and objects that can [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt destroy the world]] if not maintained properly, sentient objects, time-displaced creatures and people, robots, and other weird phenomenon.
449* In the ''WebVideo/SevenSecondRiddles'' universe, ordinary humans live alongside all sorts of monsters and other strange creatures -- from ghosts, to vampires, to aliens, and everything in-between. Many riddles either involve escaping from these monsters, or solving a riddle based around understanding the monsters and their stereotypical traits -- such as that [[SilverHasMysticPowers silver can harm werewolves]] or that [[WeakenedByTheLight sunlight kills vampires]]. It's just accepted in these riddles that these monsters exist and we need to deal with them somehow.
450* WebVideo/JesuOtaku criticizes ''Film/SnowWhiteAndTheHuntsman'' for seeming to borrow its fantasy world from other works instead of trying to create one of its own.
451* ''Literature/{{Spectral Shadows}}'' may qualify for this; we've got {{Funny Animal}}s, vampires, fairies, mermaids, magical world-warping powers, time travel, music with power behind it, ghosts, worlds inside one's own mind; the list goes on.
452* ''Literature/StarHarborNights'': This world have superheroes, magic, aliens and well, you get the point.
453* ''Podcast/TheStoragePapers'' has psychics, demons, aliens, [[TheMenInBlack a shadowy government agency]], sentient nightmares, BigCreepyCrawlies that live in the Californian wilderness, ghosts, werewolves, time travelers, and various [[EldritchAbomination Eldritch]], [[HumanoidAbomination Humanoid]], and [[AnimalisticAbomination Animalistic Abominations]] running around killing people.
454* Stories in ''Website/TheWanderersLibrary'' range from science fiction to urban fantasy and often blend genres. The Library itself acts as a waypoint between many, many universes, so almost any sort of patron can be found there.
455* ''Roleplay/WeAreAllPiratesRevenge'' has a whole bunch of craziness going on for a roleplay about pirates. There's witches, shape-shifting dragons, giant bipedal rodents, and even [[AnimateInanimateObject talking treasure chests]], to name a few.
456* ''Podcast/WelcomeToNightVale'': A lot of the [[SlidingScaleOfComedyAndHorror comedy and horror]] comes from the fact that there can be anything on the town and be treated as something mundane. This includes [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]], a [[OurDragonsAreDifferent five-headed dragon]] who wants to be Mayor, a floating cat, whoever or whatever the Man on the Tan Jacket is, RidiculouslyHumanRobots, a group of feral dogs who are street artists [[spoiler: and supposedly [[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext were just plastic bags]] ]], {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, [[BigBrotherIsWatching a mysterious and menacing government and it's secret police]], a faceless old woman [[RunningGag (who secretly lives on your house)]], {{ancient conspirac|y}}ies, dinosaurs, [[AmbiguouslyHuman whatever or whoever Cecil is]], doppelgängers… And that's not even the half of it.
457* The Literature/WhateleyUniverse. Mutants, FunctionalMagic, super-science, demons, CosmicHorrorStory, and some of the more experienced characters have mentioned aliens too.
458[[/folder]]
459
460[[folder:Western Animation]]
461* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'' is this, in spades - radioactive mutants, wizards, zombies, cyborgs, robots, talking candy and animals, a lich, vampires, demons (including one shapeshifting demon-vampire hybrid), dragons, goblins, wolf men, psychic worms, a post-apocalyptic setting, alternate timelines and dimensions (including a MULTIVERSE of various worlds), aliens, super-chill God beings, floating fiery eyeballs, talking skeletons, giants, mermaids, ghosts, fairies, minotaurs, a talking video-game system, unicorn/rainbow hybrids called "rainicorns" which one warred with sentient dogs, a cursed ice wizard, and a number of different kingdoms each with their own rules, royalty and legendary heroes (whose denizens are, respectively, made from varying elements and objects, such as sentient Breakfast People, Slime People and Fire People, to name a few). The list goes on and on, et cetera.
462* Given its surreal nature, it only figures that ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' would qualify. There are characters which are talking animals, ghosts, minotaurs, LivingToys, AnthropomorphicFood, and just about every [[EverythingTalks talking object you could imagine]]. Even the humans that have appeared seem very odd, [[ItMakesSenseInContext as they're stuck in]] TheEighties.
463* ''WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce'' probably takes the cake. Want proof? The mains are three giant, living fast food items.
464** Still not impressed? Try depressed living alcoholic dolls, an army of perpetually-partying furries, evil leprechauns, talking trees, a GiantSpider that tries to take over the world with a global diet pill pyramid scheme, and a mouthless alien that wants a 401k.
465** ''Still not impressed?'' How about a giant talking penis that thinks he's actually a tooth, Atari-looking 8-bit aliens that reside on the moon, Spiky aliens from [[PlutoIsExpendable Pluto]] who come to Earth to steal cable, UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler's soul [[AdolfHitlarious trapped inside a balloon]], an evil mermaid, a penis-enlarging machine that gives radiation poisoning to the user and revives dead pets as gay zombies. Also, the giant spider is now a cow that wants to gather billions of flies who use their acid spit to melt the walls of the First National Bank.
466** '''STILL''' not impressed?! Aliens from UsefulNotes/{{Jupiter}} looking for human sex slaves, a stylish wig that turns the user into a frozen clown, drunken fraternity brothers from space, a supercomputer that travels back in time an enables a caveman to live forever, a giant clove of garlic that's also a spider that murders humans for food. Also this time the cow is now an old man who sold a rap record in Transylvania to attract a vampire to him so he could be immortal because he keeps on dying and coming back to life as something worse, and the giant talking penis, now a tooth, thinks he's actually a hamburger.
467** Dr. Weird is on this show. A MadScientist who created flying corn, impregnated a lawnmower, found a way to talk out of his ass, has such HighPressureBlood that he wanted his unpaid intern to decapitate him with an axe and the blood would propel his lifeless body to Phoenix, UsefulNotes/{{Arizona}}... or Alabama [[YourMom to see his mother.]]
468-->'''Dr. Weird''': Gentlemen... my ass has finally decided to eat MY HAND! (Sharp cracking sound is heard) It hungers... '''FOR MORE.''' (His ass pulls his entire body into a singularity)
469* ''WesternAnimation/{{Centurions}}'' was a ScienceFiction series, filled with TechnologyPorn and set TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture. On top of that, the writers introduced {{Dracula}}, Myth/{{Merlin}}, a HotWitch and her EvilTwin [[TheGloriousWarOfSisterlyRivalry sister]], an army of [[{{Mummy}} mummies]], {{Atlantis}}, PsychicPowers, a "zombie master", and accidental TimeTravel into various episodes.
470* ''WesternAnimation/ChalkZone'' was centered around the titular world, a place where all erased chalk drawings become living beings. Considering the imagination of the children who create most of them, this has clear meaning on the diversity of the [=ChalkZone=]'s denizens.
471* Both the original ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' and the [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 2017 reboot]] take place in a world populated by anthropomorphic animals that coexist with ancient gods, evil sorcerers, genies, monsters, ghosts, sentient robots, aliens and living prehistoric creatures.
472* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' has fairies, genies, pixies, aliens, robots, mermaids, krakens, and everything in between.
473* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy''. The underlying reality of the show is deliberately tenuous anyway.
474* In nearly all incarnations of the series, WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat's world has talking animals and humans living alongside each other, fantasy characters like King Neptune and Old King Cole appearing, surreal or sometimes supernatural phenomenon like ghosts, fairies and evil witches appearing, and Felix sometimes using a Magic Carpet as a transport. The Oriolo era keeps the fairy tale and fantasy elements, but also introduces science fiction elements like a mad scientist who wants Felix's Magic Bag of Tricks, a BrainInAJar robot who lives on the moon, and the occasional encounter with friendly aliens.
475* ''WesternAnimation/FostersHomeForImaginaryFriends'' takes place in a world where anything children believe in can come to life, which has obvious implications on the world's population...
476* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' is not only a SciFiKitchenSink of humans, robots, mutants and extraterrestrials [[RubberForeheadAliens of all stripes]] but also contains occasional zombies, fairies, wizards, vampires and ghosts ([[VirtualGhost virtual]] and otherwise).
477* ''WesternAnimation/TheGarfieldShow'', of all things, takes place in one of these. Over the course of the series, the titular character has encountered mad scientists, witches, aliens, ancient civilizations trapped in alternate dimensions, superheroes, and various other oddities.
478* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'' began with the titular characters being the lone survivors of a long-vanished race of semi-magical creatures. Over the seasons, it branched out to give us more gargoyles, fairies, witches, sorcerers, normal people cursed with immortality, living Native American spirits, Greek gods, The Loch Ness Monster, King Arthur, the list went on and on. That's not even counting the weirdness that was man-made, like the evil clones, cyborg mercenaries, nanomachines, sentient robots and the global-spanning conspiracies. (Although most of the supernatural creatures that they encountered were eventually given a MetaOrigin as Oberon's children). King Arthur (as if to drive this point home THE King Arthur) encapsulates the entire series in one statement; "All things are true... ''few'' things are ''accurate''."
479* The town of ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'', Oregon, has it all; figures of classic mythology, monsters that look like they were made by someone drunk and drugged up, ghosts, government conspiracies, a local secret society, aliens, living video games, you name it. The reason why is because the entire area is one big WeirdnessMagnet, attracting abnormalities from deformed jellybeans to {{Eldritch Abomination}}s.
480* ''{{WesternAnimation/Hilda}}'' includes a [[MixAndMatchCritters deer-fox]], giants, elves, [[RockMonster rock trolls]], [[GiantFlyer a thunderbird]], a RatKing, the ghostly [[DreamWeaver Marra]], actual ghosts, [[OurSpiritsAreDifferent water spirits]], [[{{Cumulonemesis}} weather spirits]], a [[OurDragonsAreDifferent lindworm]], a [[GildedCage trapping house]], the [[PocketDimension Nisse]], and a [[{{Hellhound}} Barghest]].
481* ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'' uses this, with magical objects, superheroes, mutants, aliens, time travel, ghostly possession, and Mystical Monkey Powers.
482* ''WesternAnimation/TheMagicKey'' can take Biff, Chip, Kipper, and Floppy to worlds filled with all sorts of different magical beings- they’ve seen trolls, dragons and knights, wizards and witches, and stranger things, such as a world populated by [[AnimateInanimateObject sentient tools]].
483* ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'':
484** ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyAndFriends'': As a result of the show introducing new allies and threats more or less every episode, the setting is a widely diverse collection of fantasy and fairytale elements -- unicorns, pegasi, hippocampi, dragons, goblins, trolls, elves, talking animals, wicked sorcerers and ancient evils, lava and ice monsters, animated plants, assorted magic artifacts, and various original creations all populate Dream Valley.
485** ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'': Equestria, in addition to the magic-wielding {{unicorn}} ponies, [[PaintingTheFrostOnWindows weather-controlling]] {{pegasus}} ponies, and [[WingedUnicorn alicorn]] princesses, has a host of creatures derived from different mythologies, such as [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragons]], [[OurGryphonsAreDifferent griffins]], [[OurSirensAreDifferent sirens]], manticores, [[TheFairFolk changelings]], [[SandWorm tatzlwurms]], Ahuizotl, cockatrices, chimeras, [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti yeti]], hippogriffs, bunyips, jackalopes, and a RiddlingSphinx.
486* ''WesternAnimation/OKKOLetsBeHeroes'' has, let's see...aliens, robots, [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]], [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]], a {{mummy}}, WitchesAndWizards, {{ninja}}s, and {{Funny Animal}}s. Yeah, that's about it.
487* ''WesternAnimation/{{Rick and Morty}}'' revolves around a mad scientist and his grandson portal-hopping throughout The Multiverse on a multitude of wacky self-aware metafiction adventures, so it is only natural for it to be this; in the words of Rick, there are "infinite realities, infinite possibilities". There are endless species of extraterrestrial life (classic aliens and otherwise), alternate versions of every single person in existence, clones, various hyper-intelligent robots and AI, time travel, vampires, dragons, wizards, giant telepathic spiders, Bigfoot, Jesus Christ, superheroes, anthropomorphic personifications of tropes, and so so so much more.
488* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack''; Jack has encountered plenty of fantastical creatures and enemies, ranging from demons, robots, aliens, HornyVikings, 20s era gangsters, gargoyles, [[BraveScot Highlanders]], [[OurSirensAreDifferent sirens]], pirates, ninjas, Spartan Warriors, dragons, fish people, Old West bounty hunters, faeries, nature spirits, elementals, and zombies.
489* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' uses the Fantasy Kitchen Sink approach, with aliens, killer robots, zombies, James Bond-ish supervillains, the Judeo-Christian God, Native American deities, leprechauns, "The [[{{Expy}} Formidable Mulk]]", and the Loch Ness Monster all apparently existing within the same universe. This is true even if you don't count the non-canonical ''WesternAnimation/TreehouseOfHorror'' episodes.
490* ''WesternAnimation/SmilingFriends:'' Just about any creature of fantasy can show up for the sake of a joke, or the plot. In the Smiling Friends' city there is even an entire city square that's also a self-contained medieval fantasy setting complete with fantastic quests, demons, witches, shapeshifters, medusas, centaurs, giant spiders, dragons, goblins, and apparently an entire civilization of Tolkien-esque elves. And TheGreys.
491-->'''Charlie:''' That one's not even fantasy, that's just an ''alien'', Pim!
492%%* ''WesternAnimation/SofiaTheFirst'': let's check: Mermaids?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Oona]]check!, Witches?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/lucinda]]check!, Talking beasts?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Kai_(Sofia_the_First)]]check!, Fairies?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Chrysta]]check!, Angels (or wind riders as they're known)[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Orion_(Sofia_the_First)]]check!, Dragons?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Crackle]] check!, Fauns?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Winter_(Sofia_the_First)]]check!, Pegasus?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Minimus]]check!, Alicorns?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Skye]]check!, Trolls?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Trolls_(Sofia_the_First)]]check!, Miscellaneous chimeric beast?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Wilbur_the_Wombeast]]check!, Wishing wells(which voice is suspiciously similar to that of HAL-3000 from 2001:A Space Oddysey)?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Wishing_Well_(Sofia_the_First)]]check!, Ghosts?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Sir_Dax]]check!, Giants?[[https://sofiathefirst.fandom.com/wiki/King_of_the_giants]]check!, Sprites?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Button,_Benngee,_and_Brody]]check!, Gargoyles?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Muck,_Gunk,_and_Grime]]check!, Hobgoblins?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Spruce]]check!, Djinns?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Sergeant_Fizz]]check!, Elves?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Elfonso]]check!, Sphinxes?[[https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/File:Sphinx_(Sofia_the_First).png]]check!...one has to wonder if there were vampires or lycantropes meant to appear in this show but the producers decided against it instead sending them straight into Vampirina...
493* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' has had things like angels, demons, ghosts, zombies, succubi, gnomes, wizards, dragons, and aliens. That is not even getting into Imaginationland. In the commentary for one of the Imaginationland episodes, Matt and Trey talked about an idea for a [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot zombie vampiwerepichaun]], or something to that effect, which they said was a leprechaun bitten by a werewolf and a vampire that gets killed and becomes a zombie, much like the ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'' example above.
494* ''WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil'' is itself about a magical princess from another dimension. We've encountered magic users, aliens, demons, unicorns, giant monsters, fairies, lizard people, talking animals, goblins, and monsters of many kinds in general.
495* The world of ''WesternAnimation/{{Super 4}}'' includes a land of knights, a pirate island, a technological city, a fairy land, etc.
496* ''WesternAnimation/SWATKats'' ran with this in multiple directions: of the five major recurring villains, one was a mutant MadScientist, one an undead sorcerer, one a DiabolicalMastermind with a small army of demonic henchmen, and the last two were a husband-wife pair of gangster robots. Some of the one-shot villains included aliens (twice), ghosts (also twice), and a Volcano Demon. One of the best examples is possibly the episode "A Bright and Shiny Future" where the evil undead sorcerer Pastmaster goes TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture and revives the robot gangster Metallikats, creating a BadFuture where the SWAT Kats have been killed and Megakat City conquered by robot hordes. Pastmaster then goes back in time (to the presumed "present") and pulls ''those'' SWAT Kats ahead into the BadFuture to ensure their total destruction.
497* ''WesternAnimation/{{Teen Titans|2003}}'' has an alien, a cyborg and a demon as part of the same team, and their opponents are quite varied as well. They even fight a BrainInAJar and talking gorilla team! Still not convinced? [[ARareSentence How about a jar with a living, intelligent piece of alien... tofu...]] that tries to take over the world by starting a chain of fast food restaurants that serve a delicious meat substitute made of his secretions... which happens to be more alien tofu.
498* ''WesternAnimation/{{ThunderCats|1985}}'' was made of this trope. It starts out with one feline humanoid alien race being chased by other mutant alien races after their planet's gyroscope blew up, introduced a [[SpiritAdvisor ghost mentor]]... They all crashland on a planet called Third Earth, inhabited by android robot bears, an evil mummy that transforms into an evil flying supermummy with the help of [[EldritchAbomination ancient demonic spirits]], with an enemy of the week that is either a Nazi starship captain (Shiner), cybernetic killer pirates (Hammerhand), a sort of yeti king who rides a giant snowcat (Snowman), a time-traveling samurai (Hachiman) or an Egyptian prince with a magic mindcontrol helmet who was trapped by the sphinx in an alternate dimension... And merchandising on steroids: the Thundertank, Cat's Lair, and various other massive metal machines. Oh, there was a female space cop as well. And hydras. And Grune the Destroyer appears to be an undead villain from the dawn of time. And volcano gods. And amazonian girl-ninjas of the treetops. And unicorns. And the Dobermen (aargh, aargh). And [[DeathByOriginStory dead parents]], telepathy and [[AnAesop addiction]]. The entire thing was written on crack.
499* In ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'', there are a few episodes that the eponymous robots end up in a fantasy plot involving magic in it.
500* ''WesternAnimation/UglyAmericans'' follows the life of social worker at the Dept. of Integration in New York City. Those in need of integration? Vampires, zombies, werewolves, land-whales, mermaids, and various people human and 'other'.
501* Jokingly referenced in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBros'', where pirates board the Venture family's ship.
502-->'''Hank:''' Brock, if pirates really exist, then Santa Claus and The Tooth Fairy could even be real, right?! It's like all bets are off!\
503'''Brock:''' Hank, nobody ever said pirates don't exist.\
504'''Hank''': So you agree with me that this is impossible!
505** And the show itself is about a family of mad scientists whose next-door neighbor is a ComicBook/DoctorStrange CaptainErsatz, so there's a fair bit of overlap between sci-fi and fantasy.
506* The ''WesternAnimation/WinxClub'' universe features fairies, witches, sorcerers, pixies, warriors, nymphs, ghosts, dragons, ogres, trolls, mermaids, {{Wizarding School}}s, and magic trees in the Magic Dimension. That doesn't even count the fact that the main characters are all aliens from different worlds, or all the [[ScienceFantasy sci-fi elements]] present.
507* ''WesternAnimation/{{Wishfart}}'', in spades. The main characters alone are a {{leprechaun}}, a [[TalkingAnimal talking puffin]], and a StringyHairedGhostGirl. And among the supporting and background characters, we've got [[CatsAreMagic a magical talking cat]], mermaids, demons, wizards and witches, gargoyles, centaurs, yetis, minotaurs, unicorns, {{Snowlems}}, robots, various {{Funny Animal}}s, King Neptune, a Hindu goddess, a two-faced woman (based on an actual Roman god), fairies, griffons, dragons, Bigfoot, gingerbread men, {{selkies|AndWereseals}}, cyclopses, SantaClaus, vampires, hydras, the Kraken, a turtle monster, a lemon-man, and a monster made out of chewing gum.
508[[/folder]]
509
510[[folder:Other]]
511* A mainstay of ''Magazine/WeeklyWorldNews'' -- aliens advise the president, Congress is full of zombies (sure that's made up?), Dick Cheney is a robot, Satan was captured by American soldiers in Iraq, mermen have been found in the South Pacific and Bigfoot is advertising his crash diet.
512** Don't be silly. Dick Cheney is obviously a ''vampire''.
513*** Five bucks says he's related to Bat Boy!
514* Film star Colleen Moore's Fairy Castle dollhouse, completed in 1935 and displayed at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry, features elements of all the silent film actress's favorite stories from childhood. Classic fairy tales like Literature/{{Cinderella}} and Literature/HanselAndGretel appear side by side with Arthurian myth, the Arabian Nights, literary characters like Gulliver and Robinson Crusoe, authentic historical artifacts and religious icons from all over the world, and a 20th-century SantaClaus and WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse.
515[[/folder]]
516
517[[folder:Real Life, Folklore, and Religion]]
518* As the Ancient Romans conquered areas, they would incorporate the local mythology into their own, leading to a state religion in which nearly every god and creature from Britain to India coexisted, and one was free to worship whatever they wanted so long as they worshiped the Emperor and they weren't planning on rebelling against the authorities as well.
519** As did most ancient peoples. Many believed their gods were tied to a particular place and didn't have jurisdiction outside of it. For example: the Egyptian Gods only had power in Egypt not in the entire world. While virtually everyone in the ancient Mediterranean acknowledged the divinity of the Egyptian Pharaoh, that also didn't mean much to people who lived outside Egypt unless they were in a position to meet him.
520* [[UsefulNotes/AllHallowsEve Halloween]]. Things like vampires, witches, and Frankenstein's monster, which are associated with Halloween, come from different sources.
521* Omnism is that belief that [[AllMythsAreTrue all religions ever conceived are true]] - or, at least, contain some truth in it. Many type of syncretic religions can apply, actually.
522* The names for the days of the week are like this in multiple languages:
523** English: Sunday and Monday are named for the two most prominent astronomical bodies, the Sun and Moon. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday are named for Norse and Germanic gods, specifically Tyr, Woden (aka Odin), Thor, and Freyja/Frigg, respectively. The one particular oddball is Saturday, or Saturn's Day, which is the only day named after a Roman god in English. This likely came about via CulturalTranslation of the Roman Days of the week into Germanic cultures, with the Roman gods swapped out for their Germanic equivalents, with the exception of Saturday due to the lack an equivalent deity.
524** Romance languages (French, Spanish, etc): Tuesday through Friday are named after Roman gods[[note]]Respectively, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, and Venus.[[/note]]. Saturday and Sunday are both named for their Judaeo-Christian significance, skipping over the sun. Monday is still named after the moon, though. (Portuguese is the lone exception, due to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_of_Braga a 6th century archbishop]] who thought this custom was blasphemous.)
525* NewAge authors will often describe worlds and dimensions with Dragons, Elves, Fairies, and Unicorns, as part of TheMultiverse.
526* Many modern conspiracy theories and apocalypse prophecies use this trope. For example: a rumor started in the US in 2012 that the apocalypse had been foretold by the ancient Maya, as the day that their calendar "ended" (the calendar in question is circular, it reset rather than ending). But people didn't suddenly start believing that the Maya version of the apocalypse was going to happen. They thought the Maya had accurately foretold the date of the ''biblical'' apocalypse! Others will claim that vastly different mythological creatures were inspired by the same AncientAstronauts or are actually shape-shifting creatures. Usually this is because such theories typically originate on the internet and very often don't have a single author.
527* Japanese media can be set in places other than Japan, and they have a habit of turning local cryptids (folklore creatures) into yokai or something else familiar to a Japanese audience. While this is of course the point of yokai, it does [[HandWave sweep under the rug]] the fact that different cultures don't all view their cryptids in the same way.
528* In Wicca, doing this is called "eclecticism", wherein practitioners will mix and match gods and spirits from many different religious traditions and is genuinely very inclusive.
529[[/folder]]

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